| Outcome | Probability | Yes Bid | Yes Ask | 24h Change | Volume | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Hubert Hurkacz | 0% | 0¢ | 0¢ | — | $0 | Trade → |
| Ethan Quinn | 0% | 0¢ | 0¢ | — | $0 | Trade → |
This market asks which player will win the second set of the match between Ethan Quinn and Hubert Hurkacz. Set-level markets let traders isolate short-term match dynamics, offering opportunities distinct from predicting the overall match winner.
Hubert Hurkacz is an experienced tour-level player known for a powerful serve and all-court movement; Ethan Quinn is a younger, developing player who often plays an aggressive baseline game. Their matchup will emphasize serve-versus-return dynamics, in-match adjustments, and how each handles momentum swings across sets.
Market prices represent the consensus view of traders about who will take set 2, reflecting pre-match information and any in-play developments just before the set begins. Because this is a single-set contract, serve order, the result and nature of the first set, and any on-court incidents are especially influential.
The market resolves to the official winner of the second set as recorded by the tournament’s official scorer. If the set is not played or is incomplete, resolution follows the platform’s documented rules for unfinished events — check the market terms or platform FAQ for the exact policy.
A tiebreak is part of Set 2; the player who wins the tiebreak is the official winner of Set 2 and the market is resolved accordingly.
If a retirement occurs while Set 2 is in progress, the official match score will reflect the outcome and the market resolves to the recorded winner. If Set 2 never starts due to a pre-set retirement or walkover, consult the platform’s rules — such markets are often handled under specific 'no contest' or void provisions.
Serve order matters because starting server often has an early tactical edge; with Hurkacz’s strong serve and Quinn’s return-oriented aggression, which player serves first can influence early break opportunities and short-term momentum in the set.
Pre-match: recent form, match fitness, any injury reports, and head-to-head history (if available). In-play: winner/unforced error patterns from Set 1, first-serve percentage, break-point conversion, visible fatigue or medical timeouts, and wind or court condition changes — set-level outcomes often hinge on immediate, on-court signals.