| Outcome | Probability | Yes Bid | Yes Ask | 24h Change | Volume | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Alex Michelsen | 0% | 0¢ | 0¢ | — | $0 | Trade → |
| Alejandro Tabilo | 0% | 0¢ | 0¢ | — | $0 | Trade → |
This market asks which player will win the second set of the Alejandro Tabilo vs Alex Michelsen match. Set-level markets let traders focus on short-term match dynamics and in-play momentum rather than the final match result.
Alejandro Tabilo and Alex Michelsen are professional tour players with contrasting profiles: Tabilo is typically an experienced baseliner who relies on timing and shot selection, while Michelsen is a younger, powerful mover with a strong serve and aggressive game. The specific tournament, surface, and match stage influence how their styles match up, and those contextual factors matter as much as individual form and health.
Market odds indicate how participants collectively view who is likely to win the second set and will change as new information arrives (injuries, momentum, weather). Treat odds as an aggregate signal that updates with match events rather than a fixed prediction.
It resolves on which player is officially recorded as the winner of the match's second set under the tournament's rules; if the set is decided by a standard tiebreak, the tiebreak winner is the set winner.
If a retirement occurs during set 2, the opponent who remains on court is generally considered the winner of that set; if set 2 is not played at all due to a pre-match walkover or abandonment, settlement will follow the platform's voiding or cancellation rules.
A standard second-set tiebreak winner is treated as the second-set winner for settlement. If the tournament uses an alternate format (rarely replacing set 2), consult the official match rules for resolution.
Those events can change in-play odds and match conditions, but settlement is based on the official recorded outcome of set 2; if the second set is not completed for any reason, the platform's event-specific rules determine whether the market is void or resolved.
Look for the announced surface and session, each player's recent second-set tendencies and physical signs during the match or previous rounds, any official injury or coaching updates, head-to-head notes, and live in-play developments like early breaks or medical timeouts.