| Outcome | Probability | Yes Bid | Yes Ask | 24h Change | Volume | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Arthur Fils | 0% | 34¢ | 53¢ | — | $0 | Trade → |
| Felix Auger-Aliassime | 0% | 44¢ | 65¢ | — | $0 | Trade → |
This market asks which player will win the second set of the Arthur Fils vs Felix Auger-Aliassime match. It matters because set-level markets isolate short-term dynamics that differ from the overall match outcome.
Arthur Fils and Felix Auger-Aliassime are ATP tour-level players with contrasting styles and varying experience levels; set outcomes often reflect brief shifts in serve effectiveness and momentum. Surface, tournament stage, and recent form influence how each player performs in individual sets, and in-match developments can quickly change expectations for a single set.
Market prices reflect the collective view of who is expected to win the second set, incorporating pre-match form and live match developments such as momentum, serves, and injuries. Traders should treat prices as real-time indicators that update as new information arrives.
The market settles to the player who is officially recorded as the winner of the second set on the match scorecard; if the set is decided by a tiebreak, the tiebreak winner is the set winner.
If the second set is not completed, settlement follows the exchange's official event rules; typically that means the market may be voided or settled according to the platform's stated contingency policies—check the event page or rulebook for precise guidance.
If the second set was completed before the retirement, the market is settled to the player who won that completed set; retirements that occur before completion of set 2 trigger the platform's contingency rules for incomplete sets.
The first-set score is informative because it signals momentum, confidence, and possible tactical shifts; a decisive first set can affect energy and strategy in set 2, but it does not determine the outcome—each set has its own dynamics.
Monitor the set 1 scoreline and length, on-court medical timeouts, serving statistics (aces, double faults, first-serve percentage), break points saved/converted, visible fatigue or movement issues, and any coach or player comments between sets.