Match Result

Tennis Match Results – Scores, Outcomes & Post-Match Analysis

Every prediction has an ending. A score goes up, the players shake hands at the net, and the match becomes part of the record. At GreenSet Prediction, we don’t just publish tips and move on — we track every result, document every score, and offer a brief breakdown of how each match actually unfolded.

This is where all of that lives.

The Match Results section is the complete archive of completed ATP and WTA matches covered on GreenSet Prediction. Every entry includes the final score, a short post-match summary covering the key moments and tactical story of the match, and — where we published a prediction beforehand — a note on how our tip performed. We think that transparency matters. Anyone can publish predictions. Fewer sites are willing to keep an honest public record of how those predictions hold up over time.

What You’ll Find in Each Match Result

Each completed match page contains the same core information, kept clean and easy to read:

  • Final score — the full scoreline, set by set, so you have the complete picture of how the match developed rather than just the winner.
  • Post-match summary — a short, focused breakdown of what actually happened. Who controlled the match and when? Was the scoreline flattering to the winner, or did they earn it comfortably? Were there significant momentum swings, weather interruptions, or physical issues that shaped the result? We keep these summaries concise — a few hundred words that give you the substance without padding it out unnecessarily.
  • Prediction outcome — where GreenSet published a pre-match tip, we note clearly whether our prediction was correct. No rewriting history, no creative accounting. The tip either landed or it didn’t, and we record it straight.
  • Key match stats — where available, we include the headline numbers: aces, double faults, first serve percentage, break points won. Not every statistic tells a meaningful story, but the right ones often explain results that look surprising at first glance.
  • Why We Keep a Results Archive

The results archive exists for a few reasons, and they’re all connected to the same basic principle: accountability.

Prediction sites that only ever show you what’s coming next — and never what happened — are hiding something. It might not be deliberate, but the effect is the same. Without a record of past results, there’s no way to assess whether the analysis is actually any good. You’re being asked to trust something you have no basis for evaluating.

GreenSet Prediction is built differently. We believe that a track record — even an imperfect one — is more useful to a reader than a curated highlight reel. Tennis is an unpredictable sport. The best analysis in the world doesn’t produce a clean winning record every week. What it does produce, over time, is a pattern of reasoning that holds up — where the wins come from positions of genuine analytical strength and the losses are explainable rather than random.

The results archive lets you see all of that. Browse back through a week of results, read the post-match summaries, check how our predictions performed, and form your own view of whether our approach makes sense. That’s exactly how we think it should work.

Following the Form Guide Across the Tour

Beyond the individual match pages, the results archive gives you something else that’s genuinely useful — a running form guide across the tour.

Tennis form is one of the most important and most misread factors in match predictions. Official rankings update slowly and reflect results across a rolling 52-week period, which means they can significantly lag behind a player’s actual current level. A player ranked 28th who has won 14 of their last 16 matches on the current surface is a very different proposition from a player ranked 28th who has lost in the first round at their last three events. The score sheets tell that story far more clearly than the rankings do.

Browsing the match results section by player or by tournament gives you exactly that kind of current-form picture. Who has been winning clean? Who has been dropping sets they shouldn’t? Who has been involved in three-setters every match and might be running low on physical reserves heading into the next round? These patterns emerge from the results, and they feed directly into the quality of forward-looking predictions.

Organised by Tournament, Surface, and Tour

The results archive is organised to make browsing straightforward. You can filter by:

  1. Tournament — follow a specific event from first round through to the final, with every result documented in sequence.
  2. Tour — filter between ATP and WTA results depending on what you’re following.
  3. Surface — view results by clay, grass, or hardcourt, which is particularly useful for tracking surface-specific form across a season.
  4. Player — search for a specific player to see all their recent completed matches, results, and post-match summaries in one place.

Whether you’re catching up on a tournament you couldn’t follow live, checking a player’s recent record ahead of an upcoming match, or reviewing how a specific prediction played out, the results section is designed to make that as quick and straightforward as possible.

Results and Predictions Working Together

The match results section and the predictions section are two halves of the same thing. Our pre-match analysis sets out what we expect and why. The post-match summary records what actually happened and how closely it matched the prediction. Over time, the relationship between those two things is the most honest measure of analytical quality there is.

We use our own results archive to improve. When a prediction misses — when a match goes against our analysis — we try to understand why. Was it a factor we didn’t account for? A physical issue that emerged during the match? A tactical adjustment from one of the players that changed the shape of the contest? Sometimes the answer is simply that tennis is unpredictable and the better player on paper had an off day. But often there’s something learnable in the result, and feeding that back into future analysis is how the quality of predictions improves over time.

That process is visible in the archive. You can trace it yourself.

Stay Up to Date With the Latest Results

The results section updates throughout each match day as completed scores come in. Check back after the day’s play concludes for the full set of post-match summaries, or follow specific tournaments as they progress to keep a running picture of the draw.

For upcoming matches and today’s predictions, head back to the homepage or browse our tournament pages. The results will be waiting here when the tennis is done.

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