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2025 Libema Open: Djere [64th] vs. Lajal [195th] Prediction, Odds and Match Preview

2025 Libema Open: Djere [64th] vs. Lajal [195th] Prediction, Odds and Match Preview

USA Today10-06-2025
2025 Libema Open: Djere [64th] vs. Lajal [195th] Prediction, Odds and Match Preview
No. 64-ranked Laslo Djere will face No. 195 Mark Lajal in the Libema Open Round of 32 on Tuesday, June 10.
Lajal has -120 odds to earn a spot in the Round of 16 over Djere (-105).
Tennis odds courtesy of BetMGM Sportsbook. Odds updated Monday at 10:35 PM ET. For a full list of sports betting odds, access USA TODAY Sports Betting Scores Odds Hub.
Laslo Djere vs. Mark Lajal matchup info
Tournament: Libema Open
Libema Open Round: Round of 32
Round of 32 Date: Tuesday, June 10
Tuesday, June 10 Court Surface: Grass
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Djere vs. Lajal Prediction
Based on the implied probility from the moneyline, Djere has a 54.5% to win.
Djere vs. Lajal Betting Odds
Djere vs. Lajal matchup performance & stats
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Or 'What were they talking about?' "By the time I got to the Super Bowl, I was way more comfortable. It was just a really rewarding year. And it wasn't perfect by any means, and I certainly didn't expect it to be perfect. But I'm just excited about now going into Year 2, with one year under my belt, and again, still having people that are on this journey with me that kind of have brought so much joy to my life in my post-career. So it's been really amazing." Klatt: You capped off your first year with 128 million people watching your game. Meanwhile, I think back to my start in the business. I did a high school football game in Denver that maybe 28 people were watching, just moms, dads and relatives of these high school kids. Were you prepared at all for going through those growing pains in your first year? Brady: "I think, ironically, for me, I was very fortunate that I played in 10 [Super Bowls]. 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The prep was fun, the week was fun and I'm just really excited now to pick up where we started at the end of last year, and I think this year is going to be a great year for us." Klatt: You were famous for your evaluation. There are stories of the night of the game, by the next morning, you would have an evaluation of the last game and a scouting report for the next team ready for the coaches, and they had to kind of follow you. I'm wondering how did that work ethic work with broadcasting, which is, let's face it, more subjective than objective in terms of, how are you doing, what worked and what didn't work? How did that evaluation that you always poured in jive with that? Brady: "I think that the tricky part for broadcasting is everybody likes something a little bit different. So it's not like a scoreboard, because the team that has more points on the scoreboard is the winner, and then the one that has less points is the loser. It's easy. 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