| Outcome | Probability | Yes Bid | Yes Ask | 24h Change | Volume | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Federico Agustin Gomez | 99% | 50¢ | 100¢ | — | $200 | Trade → |
| Shintaro Mochizuki | 99% | 0¢ | 78¢ | — | $199 | Trade → |
This market asks which player will win the second set of the match between Federico Agustin Gomez and Shintaro Mochizuki. Set-level markets matter because set outcomes reflect in-match adjustments, momentum swings, and create trading opportunities independent of the final match result.
Federico Agustin Gomez and Shintaro Mochizuki are professional tennis players with different styles and career trajectories; their matchup context (tournament level, round, and court surface) influences expectations. The second set often shows tactical adjustments after the first set, and factors such as match length, prior meetings, and recent form can shift which player is favored to take set 2.
Market odds are a real-time summary of how traders interpret available information (first-set result, injuries, on-court momentum, etc.). Use them together with live match data and official scoring updates to understand changing expectations without treating them as fixed forecasts.
The outcome is determined by which player is officially recorded as the winner of the second set in the match scoreline published by the tournament referee or official scorer; that includes sets decided by tiebreaks.
If the second set is not played (for example, a walkover or retirement before set 2 begins), many platforms follow their rules for voiding or refunding such markets; whether this market is voided depends on the exchange’s settlement policy and the official match report.
If retirement occurs during set 2 and the set is not completed, settlement depends on whether an official winner of that set is recorded; some platforms require a completed set for resolution, while others follow the official scoreline (which may show a partial score with retirement). Check the exchange’s rulebook and the tournament’s official match report for final determination.
No; a tiebreak is part of the set. The player who wins the tiebreak is recorded as the winner of set 2 and that recorded outcome is used to settle the market.
Key stats include each player’s second-set performance history, serve and return effectiveness (hold/break rates), recent match duration and fatigue, head-to-head results, and any in-match indicators such as movement, unforced errors, or visible injury concerns.