| Outcome | Probability | Yes Bid | Yes Ask | 24h Change | Volume | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Alejandro Davidovich Fokina | 0% | 1¢ | 99¢ | — | $0 | Trade → |
| Zachary Svajda | 0% | 1¢ | 99¢ | — | $0 | Trade → |
This market asks which player will win the second set of the match between Alejandro Davidovich Fokina and Zachary Svajda. It matters to traders who want to express expectations about short-term match dynamics and set-level outcomes.
This is a set-level market within a professional men’s singles match; set outcomes often reflect short-term factors — momentum, serving performance, tactical adjustments — more than season-long form. Davidovich Fokina is widely known for aggressive baseline play, heavy spin and court coverage, while Svajda is known for flat pace and a strong serve; those stylistic differences help shape how individual sets typically play out. Head-to-head history, surface, and recent match fitness can all influence a single set more than they do an entire match.
Prediction market odds for this market summarize the market’s collective view of who is most likely to win the second set at the moment you look. Treat odds as an information summary that updates with new data — e.g., first-set result, visible injuries, or changing court conditions — rather than a guarantee of outcome.
The event listing shows the close time as TBD; typically such markets close at or just before the official start of the second set or when the platform operator specifies closure. Check the platform’s event page or rulebook for the definitive closing policy for this market.
Settlement follows the platform’s rules: common approaches are voiding the market if the second set never begins, or consulting official match records if a forfeit/withdrawal occurs. Refer to KALSHI’s event and settlement rules for the exact treatment in those scenarios.
A first-set win can bring momentum and confidence to the winner while forcing the loser to adjust tactics; players who secure the first set often enter set 2 with strategic freedom, whereas the first-set loser may play more aggressively or take more risks. The market will reflect these shifts once the first set completes.
Yes, head-to-head trends and stylistic contrasts matter — for example, a player who historically handles heavy spin better or who consistently breaks the same opponent’s serve may have an edge in a single set. However, head-to-head samples can be small and noisy, so combine that information with current form and match context.
Watch serve hold rate and return effectiveness in the opening games, number of unforced errors, visible signs of fatigue or medical treatment, tactical changes between sets (court position or shot selection), and the scoreboard pressure points (break points, long games, or a tiebreak start); these signals often precede market updates and can inform short-term trading decisions.