| Outcome | Probability | Yes Bid | Yes Ask | 24h Change | Volume | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Darwin Blanch | 17% | 0¢ | 1¢ | — | $37 | Trade → |
| Dino Prizmic | 0% | 99¢ | 100¢ | — | $0 | Trade → |
This market asks which player will win the second set of the match between Darwin Blanch and Dino Prizmic; set-level contracts let traders focus on a single segment of a match and respond to in-play developments. It matters because set outcomes often shift quickly based on momentum, fitness, and tactical adjustments that occur during the match.
Darwin Blanch and Dino Prizmic are paired for a single match; this contract isolates the second set rather than the overall match result. Background factors that typically matter here include the players' recent form, any prior meetings between them, and the tournament surface and conditions — all of which influence how the second-set dynamics tend to play out. Set 2 can be especially informative because it reflects both the immediate aftermath of set 1 and in-match tactical changes.
Odds or prices on this market represent the exchange's aggregated view about who is expected to win the second set given available information; they update as new match events occur. Treat market prices as a summary of collective information, not a guarantee of outcome.
The event page currently lists the close time as TBD; typically a set-specific market will close at or just before the official start of the second set or per the exchange's posted schedule, so monitor the contract page for the official closure.
Set 2 refers to the tournament-recognized second set of the match between Blanch and Prizmic; if a tiebreak is played within that set, the tiebreak outcome determines the set winner.
If a player retires during the second set, the opponent who is awarded that set by the official match score is treated as the set winner; if the match ends before set 2 begins (pre-set retirement or walkover), resolution follows the exchange's rulebook and the event page—check those rules for whether the market is voided or settled in a particular way.
Key signs include whether a player dominated service games or secured early breaks, visible fatigue or medical treatment, patterns of unforced errors versus winners, and the ability to hold serve under pressure — these often carry over into the second set.
Use live scoreboard updates, injury reports, serve/return statistics from set 1, and observations about momentum and conditions to adjust your view; remember markets typically price in new public information quickly, so act on reliable, timely observations and confirm any official announcements.