Eastbourne's final now matters more than a normal ATP 250 title match because the official ATP Tour schedule places its restart on Sunday, right on the edge of Wimbledon week. Ugo Humbert and Zizou Bergs are not only playing for the trophy, but also for the strongest final grass signal either man can take into the sport's biggest fortnight.
The schedule change came after ATP confirmed Saturday's final could not be completed because of rain. That interruption changes the texture of the match. Instead of one clean final-day routine, both players now have to reset mentally and return with very little space before the calendar flips toward London.
Humbert arrives with the more established grass profile and with a semifinal win over Jack Draper already sitting on the week's resume. Bergs, though, has earned his place the hard way and ATP's semifinal report makes clear he came through a very different path to reach the title match.
For bettors, the appeal is obvious. This is a real final, but it is also one of the last meaningful readings before Wimbledon begins, and that usually makes the market react faster than at a normal late-June 250.