| Outcome | Probability | Yes Bid | Yes Ask | 24h Change | Volume | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Gabriel Debru | 0% | 0¢ | 0¢ | — | $0 | Trade → |
| Alexis Galarneau | 0% | 0¢ | 0¢ | — | $0 | Trade → |
This market asks which player will win the second set of the singles match between Gabriel Debru and Alexis Galarneau. Set-level markets matter because they capture in-play shifts in momentum and are useful for traders who want shorter-duration exposure than full-match bets.
Gabriel Debru and Alexis Galarneau are competing at the professional level; the match-level context (tournament, surface, and recent form) shapes expectations for each set. Head-to-head history, recent results, and how each player handled the first set will be particularly relevant going into set 2.
Market odds reflect the collective expectations of traders about who will win set 2 and update as match events unfold. Treat odds as a real-time summary of information (scoreline, breaks, injuries, conditions) rather than a fixed forecast.
The market resolves based on the official outcome of the match's second set as reported by the tournament or the designated data provider; if the set is not completed, resolution follows the platform's published rules for retirements, walkovers, or cancellations.
Yes — the outcome of any tie-break that decides the second set is part of the set result, so the player who wins the tie-break wins the set for market purposes.
If a player retires during the second set, the opponent is typically credited with winning that set; if a retirement or walkover occurs before the second set begins, the platform will apply its official resolution policy, which may treat the market as resolved or void depending on rules.
Yes — those events create new information that participants may react to, so odds can move quickly during the match as traders update their expectations based on injuries, medical timeouts, or delays.
Watch who holds serve under pressure, first-serve percentage, break-point chances and conversion, the number of unforced errors versus winners, and any signs of physical or mental fatigue from either Debru or Galarneau.