| Outcome | Probability | Yes Bid | Yes Ask | 24h Change | Volume | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Sho Shimabukuro | 99% | 60¢ | 99¢ | — | $130 | Trade → |
| Colton Smith | 0% | 0¢ | 1¢ | — | $0 | Trade → |
This market asks which player will win the second set of the match between Colton Smith and Sho Shimabukuro, isolating a single segment of the match that can shift independently from the overall result. It matters for traders who want exposure to short-term match dynamics rather than the full-match outcome.
Set betting focuses on immediate performance and in-match adjustments; the second set can be shaped by how both players respond to the first set, including tactical changes and momentum swings. Colton Smith and Sho Shimabukuro each bring their own styles and recent form into the match, and situational factors such as surface, weather, and scheduling can influence set-level outcomes.
Market odds summarize how traders collectively expect the second set to finish and will move as live information (score progression, injuries, visible fatigue, etc.) arrives. Use odds as a real-time snapshot of market sentiment rather than a definitive prediction; they can change quickly during play.
The market resolves once an official result for the second set is posted by the match officials or tournament; if no official second-set winner is recorded due to abandonment, resolution follows the platform's contingency rules.
There are two outcomes: Colton Smith wins the second set or Sho Shimabukuro wins the second set; the market does not depend on the overall match winner beyond the second set result.
The winner of the second set is determined by the official match score, so a tiebreak winner is treated the same as any set winner—whichever player is recorded as winning the set is the market winner.
If a retirement occurs during the second set, the player declared winner of that set by the officials counts as the market winner; if the second set never starts or is left without an official result, the platform may void or follow its stated contingency procedure.
Notable developments include visible injuries or medical timeouts, unexpected service breaks, changes in serve speed/accuracy, dominant return games, and any clear momentum shifts or tactical changes between sets.