| Outcome | Probability | Yes Bid | Yes Ask | 24h Change | Volume | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Alexander Blockx | 0% | 0¢ | 0¢ | — | $0 | Trade → |
| Chun Hsin Tseng | 0% | 0¢ | 0¢ | — | $0 | Trade → |
This market determines which player will win the second set between Alexander Blockx and Chun Hsin Tseng in their match. It matters for traders who want to express or hedge views about how the match will evolve after the first set.
Both competitors are professional players with experience at ATP and Challenger levels and notable junior results; match-level context such as tournament stage, court surface, and recent form can heavily shape the contest. Pre-match preparation, any lingering injuries, and how each player handled the opening set all feed into expectations for the second set.
Market odds summarize the crowd’s expectations given available information and will update as in-match events occur (e.g., momentum shifts, injuries, weather). Because close time is listed as TBD, check the exchange’s rules for when the market locks and how final resolution is determined.
Resolution typically occurs when the second set is completed and a clear winner is recorded; if the match is abandoned, postponed, or a player retires before set 2 is decided, resolution follows the platform’s specific rules, so check the exchange’s resolution policy.
Handling of suspended or incomplete sets depends on the exchange’s policies—some markets await match resumption, others void bets if play does not resume within specified windows—confirm the exchange’s rules for interrupted matches.
A dominant first-set performance can signal momentum and confidence, while a tight set may indicate a closely matched contest; markets react to those signals along with observable factors like energy levels and tactical shifts between sets.
Head-to-head history can offer context about matchup tendencies, but its predictive value for a single set is limited compared with current form, surface, and in-match conditions; use it alongside live indicators rather than in isolation.
Watch serve consistency (first-serve percentage), return performance, break-point opportunities and conversions, visible physical cues (limping, treatments), and any tactical changes from either player between sets.