| Outcome | Probability | Yes Bid | Yes Ask | 24h Change | Volume | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| George Loffhagen | 0% | 0¢ | 0¢ | — | $0 | Trade → |
| Jurij Rodionov | 0% | 0¢ | 0¢ | — | $0 | Trade → |
This market asks which player will win the second set of the tennis match between George Loffhagen and Jurij Rodionov. Set-specific markets let traders focus on short-term match dynamics independent of the final result.
George Loffhagen and Jurij Rodionov bring different career trajectories and match experience into this matchup; recent form, surface, and fatigue from prior rounds can shape performance. The event context — tournament level, surface, and stage of the draw — will all influence how each player approaches the second set.
Market prices reflect the crowd’s view of who is likely to win the second set and will move as match events and public information change. For live sets, odds are particularly sensitive to immediate factors like the score, injuries, and in-match momentum.
It pays out based on which player is recorded as the winner of the second set in the official match scoreline, including a tiebreak result if applicable.
First-set events influence momentum, visible fatigue, and tactical reads; a player who dominated or narrowly escaped set 1 may enter set 2 with different confidence and risk-taking choices, which typically moves prices in live markets.
Settlement follows the official match result and the exchange’s rulebook. If the second set is officially awarded to a player at retirement, that player is the set winner; if the set is not completed and the exchange’s rules require a completed set for settlement, the market may be void—check KALSHI’s event rules for the definitive policy.
Yes. Faster surfaces typically favor big servers and short points, which can make single-set outcomes more volatile; slower surfaces favor longer rallies and returners. Confirm the tournament’s surface to understand which player profile is advantaged entering set 2.
Track the official match score, serve statistics and break-point conversion from set 1, any medical timeouts or visible fatigue signs, head-to-head tendencies, court conditions, and coach or on-site commentary that could signal tactical changes between sets.