| Outcome | Probability | Yes Bid | Yes Ask | 24h Change | Volume | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Juan Manuel Cerundolo | 0% | 1¢ | 99¢ | — | $0 | Trade → |
| Arthur Rinderknech | 0% | 1¢ | 99¢ | — | $0 | Trade → |
This market predicts which player will win the second set of the Juan Manuel Cerundolo vs Arthur Rinderknech match. It matters because set-by-set markets isolate in-match momentum and tactical adjustments that can differ from full-match outcomes.
Juan Manuel Cerundolo is an Argentine clay-court specialist known for heavy topspin and baseline consistency, while Arthur Rinderknech is a taller French player with a big serve and aggressive, faster-court tendencies. The matchup often comes down to serve effectiveness, return games, and how each player adapts after the first set. Tournament surface, stage (e.g., early round vs later round), and recent form also shape expectations for an individual set.
Market odds reflect traders' collective expectations about who will take the second set and update as in-match events (first-set score, injuries, breaks) unfold. Use odds as a snapshot of market sentiment and of how new information is being priced, not as fixed predictions.
Settlement will follow KALSHI's published rules and will typically occur after the second set is completed and the official tournament score for that set is available; check the platform's event page for final settlement timing and the authoritative data source used.
Resolution in retirement or suspension scenarios depends on KALSHI's event rules: some markets use the official score at the time of retirement, others may void or apply specific contingency rules. Consult KALSHI's rulebook for the exact treatment for this event.
The first-set result changes serve order, psychological momentum, and tactical choices; a first-set winner may carry confidence into set 2, but the trailing player can counter-adjust, so first-set results are informative but not determinative.
Yes—on slower surfaces like clay you should watch long baseline exchanges and fitness, whereas on faster hard courts or grass serve potency and quick points matter more; later-stage matches can also see more conservative play and emphasis on match management.
A $0 traded volume indicates little or no liquidity so far; that can mean wider spreads, larger price movement on small bets, and higher execution risk, so review available depth and recent trades (if any) before participating.