| Outcome | Probability | Yes Bid | Yes Ask | 24h Change | Volume | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Chun Hsin Tseng | 0% | 0¢ | 0¢ | — | $0 | Trade → |
| Stefanos Sakellaridis | 0% | 0¢ | 0¢ | — | $0 | Trade → |
This market asks which player will win the second set of the tennis match between Chun Hsin Tseng and Stefanos Sakellaridis on Kalshi. Set-level betting matters because it isolates short-term dynamics within a match and can be traded or wagered independently of the final result.
Chun Hsin Tseng and Stefanos Sakellaridis are professional players whose styles, recent form, and experience shape how individual sets play out. Set 2 can differ materially from the first set because players make tactical adjustments, recover from slow starts, or respond to physical issues. Court surface, match tempo, and any early-match momentum shifts often influence the distinct character of a second set.
Market odds reflect the collective expectations of traders and incorporate pre-match information and live developments; they are a real-time signal, not a guarantee. Changes in odds can track in-match events (breaks, medical timeouts, tactical changes) and new public information about the players.
The market is settled based on which player wins the second set of the match; if the set goes to a tiebreak, the tiebreak winner is the set winner. If the match does not reach a completed second set (for example, due to retirement or default), resolution will follow Kalshi's official event rules—check the event page for those specifics.
No. Winning the first set affects momentum and strategic choices but the Set 2 Winner is decided solely by who wins the second set; the first-set result is an informative input, not a determinative outcome.
Key movers include service breaks, the physical condition of a player (visible fatigue or medical timeouts), unusually high or low serving efficiency, and tactical changes that become apparent late in the first set—each can shift expectations for set 2.
Head-to-head results can reveal patterns (e.g., who tends to start stronger or win later sets) but interpret them carefully: small sample sizes, different surfaces, and matches from different stages of each player’s career can limit relevance to this specific set.
The event page currently lists the market close as TBD; trading close times are set by Kalshi and typically align with match start or specific in-play rules. Check the Kalshi event page for the confirmed close time and any updates prior to the match.