🏆
Sports OPEN

Jack Draper vs Reilly Opelka: Set 2 Winner

📊 $0 traded 🏦 Source: Kalshi
Total Volume
$0
Open Interest
0
Active Markets
2
Markets
2

Trade This Market

Yes Bid
Yes Ask
Last Price
Prev Close
Buy YES → Buy NO

Prices in cents (1¢ = 1%). Trade on Kalshi.

All Outcomes (2)
Outcome Probability Yes Bid Yes Ask 24h Change Volume
Jack Draper 0%
$0 Trade →
Reilly Opelka 0%
$0 Trade →

About This Market

This market asks which player—Jack Draper or Reilly Opelka—will win the second set of their match. A set-level market isolates the mid-match contest and is useful for traders who focus on in-play momentum and set-specific matchups.

Draper and Opelka represent contrasting styles: Opelka’s extreme height and serve create many free points and short service games, while Draper relies more on movement, heavier groundstrokes and return aggression. Surface, recent form, and the outcome and nature of the first set often provide the most relevant context for how the second set might play out.

Market prices reflect the collective, up-to-the-minute view of who is expected to take set 2 given current information; prices can change rapidly with on-court events like breaks, injuries, or shifts in weather. Use prices as a real-time summary of market sentiment rather than a fixed prediction.

Key Factors

Frequently Asked Questions

When does this market resolve relative to the match between Jack Draper and Reilly Opelka?

It resolves based on the official winner of the second set as recorded by the match’s authoritative scoreboard once that set is completed; if no official second-set winner is produced, the market follows the event’s stated resolution rules.

If the second set goes to a tiebreak, how will the Set 2 Winner market be decided?

The player who wins the tiebreak is the winner of the second set, and the market settles to that player per the official match score.

What happens to this market if a player retires during the second set?

Settlement follows the official match result: the non-retiring player is recorded as the set/match winner according to the tournament’s official scoreline and the market is settled accordingly.

If the match ends before a second set is completed (walkover or retirement before set 2 starts), how is the outcome determined?

If there is no officially completed second set, the market’s treatment depends on the event’s resolution rules; in practice, platforms typically rely on official tournament records and may void or cancel the market if no second-set winner is produced.

Which in-play statistics during this specific Draper–Opelka match most often drive movement in the Set 2 Winner prices?

Key drivers are service holds/aces, return games won and break-point conversion, first-serve percentage, visible physical issues or medical timeouts, and any swing in momentum from late games in set 1 that carry into set 2.

Related Markets