| Outcome | Probability | Yes Bid | Yes Ask | 24h Change | Volume | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Matteo Berrettini | 0% | 0¢ | 0¢ | — | $0 | Trade → |
| Alexandre Muller | 0% | 0¢ | 0¢ | — | $0 | Trade → |
This market asks which player will win the second set in the match between Alexandre Muller and Matteo Berrettini. It matters because set-level outcomes capture short-term dynamics (serve holds, tactical adjustments, momentum) that can differ from match-level expectations.
Alexandre Muller is a French tour-level player known for steady baseline play and consistency, particularly effective on slower surfaces. Matteo Berrettini is an Italian power player with a big serve and heavy forehand that often dictate hold-of-serve situations; match and surface context will shape how their strengths interact. Set 2 often reflects in-match adjustments after the opening set and can favor the player who adapts better tactically or recovers physically.
Prediction market odds for this event reflect trader expectations about who will win just the second set, not the overall match. Odds update as in-match events (first-set score, injuries, weather delays, momentum shifts) and new information arrive, so they should be read as a snapshot of collective expectations at a given time.
The market settles based on the official outcome of the second set as recorded by the tournament: the player who wins the completed second set is the settled winner.
If a player retires during the second set, the non-retiring player is recorded as the winner of that set according to standard match scoring; resolution follows the official match result.
If the second set reaches a tiebreak, the player who wins that tiebreak wins the second set; the market outcome follows the official set winner.
The market outcome depends on the eventual official result of the second set once play resumes; if the second set is never played, resolution will follow the event rules and official tournament determinations for unfinished matches.
Use the first-set score as a signal of momentum and tactical effectiveness: a lopsided first set may indicate one player’s dominance, while a tight set suggests small, addressable margins — expect adjustments from both Muller and Berrettini when interpreting that information for set 2.