| Outcome | Probability | Yes Bid | Yes Ask | 24h Change | Volume | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Reilly Opelka | 0% | 1¢ | 99¢ | — | $0 | Trade → |
| Ben Shelton | 0% | 1¢ | 99¢ | — | $0 | Trade → |
This market asks which player—Ben Shelton or Reilly Opelka—will win the second set of their match. It matters to traders and fans who want to express or profit from short-term, set-level expectations rather than the full-match outcome.
Shelton and Opelka are both big-serving American players whose matches often hinge on serve holds, returns and court movement; their contrasting build and style can produce quick service games and volatile momentum swings. Set-level markets like this reflect in-match adjustments: the pattern of play in the first set, fitness signs, and tactical changes can all shift expected Set 2 performance.
Market prices are a live aggregation of trader beliefs about who will win Set 2 and will move as new information arrives (first-set score, injuries, who serves first in the set, weather and on-court form). Use prices as a snapshot of collective expectations, not a certainty.
Settlement is based on the official match score for the second set as reported by the tournament/official scorer; the player recorded as the winner of Set 2 will be the winning outcome.
A tiebreak is just the mechanism to decide the set; the market is resolved to whichever player is officially credited with winning the second set after the tiebreak.
If a retirement or abandonment occurs, the official match report determines the Set 2 winner; if Set 2 is never started or the platform’s rules require, the market may be voided—check the specific exchange resolution policy for this event.
The close time for this event is listed as TBD; typically set-level markets close at or shortly before the start of the relevant set or when play begins on court, but confirm the platform’s posted close time for this specific market.
Key movers include the first-set score and how it was achieved (straightforward hold vs. multiple breaks), visible fitness issues or medical timeouts, shifts in serve effectiveness, weather or wind changes, and confirmation of who will serve first in Set 2.