| Outcome | Probability | Yes Bid | Yes Ask | 24h Change | Volume | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Cameron Norrie | 0% | 1¢ | 98¢ | — | $0 | Trade → |
| Carlos Alcaraz | 0% | 1¢ | 98¢ | — | $0 | Trade → |
This market determines which player, Carlos Alcaraz or Cameron Norrie, wins the second set of their match. It matters to short-term traders and tennis fans who want to express views on set-level dynamics and in-play momentum.
Carlos Alcaraz is known for aggressive baseline play, heavy ball, and rapid movement; Cameron Norrie is a left-handed, counterpunching player who relies on consistency, direction and taking the ball early. Surface, recent match load, and any head-to-head history between the two shape expectations for a second-set battle and can shift quickly based on events in the match.
Market odds here represent the market’s aggregated view of who will win set two and will update with new information such as the first-set result, injuries, and match momentum. Treat odds as a live signal that incorporates both pre-match form and in-play events rather than a fixed forecast.
Set 1’s outcome drives market movement by signaling momentum and fatigue: a comfortable win can boost the winner’s market support, while a long contested set can make the second-set markets more fluid as both players’ stamina and adjustments become more important.
A long first set increases the likelihood that recovery, physical resilience and short-term pacing matter more; the player who recovers better or manages energy and tactics will often be viewed more favorably for Set 2 by the market.
Medical timeouts typically prompt rapid market repricing because they change the expected short-term capabilities of a player; traders will update positions based on the severity, timing within the match, and official confirmation from the player or tournament.
Head-to-head provides context—styles matchups, past tactical success, and psychological edges—but its relevance depends on recency, surface, and whether past meetings involved similar match situations; markets weight that along with current match signals.
Settlement follows the platform’s rules and the tournament’s official result: if the second set is not completed, the exchange will rely on its stated resolution policy (for example, official match records or cancellation rules), so check the market’s settlement terms on the platform.