| Outcome | Probability | Yes Bid | Yes Ask | 24h Change | Volume | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Giovanni Mpetshi Perricard | 0% | 1¢ | 99¢ | — | $0 | Trade → |
| Kamil Majchrzak | 0% | 1¢ | 99¢ | — | $0 | Trade → |
This market asks which player—Kamil Majchrzak or Giovanni Mpetshi Perricard—will win the second set of their match. Set-level markets matter because they isolate short-term momentum and tactical matchups that differ from full-match betting.
Majchrzak and Mpetshi Perricard have contrasting styles and career paths that can influence single-set outcomes: one player may favor extended baseline exchanges while the other relies more on power and serve. Head-to-head history, recent form in the tournament, and the playing surface all provide context for how the second set might unfold. Because this is a set-specific market, events in the first set (injuries, momentum shifts, tactical adjustments) are especially relevant.
Market odds reflect the aggregated expectations of traders and react to new information such as the first-set score, visible injuries, and changing conditions; they indicate relative confidence rather than certainty. Use odds movements alongside match events and player tendencies to form a view of the likely second-set winner.
The first-set outcome is a major driver: the player who wins set one often carries momentum, while the loser may adjust tactics or face added pressure. Traders will update expectations based on the scoreline, length of the first set, and whether either player appeared physically or mentally compromised.
If a player retires after the second set has started, the opponent is ordinarily credited with winning that set by retirement; if the second set never begins and the platform’s rules require play to start for settlement, the market may be voided or settled according to the exchange’s cancellation policy—check the event rules for specifics.
Visible injuries or extended medical timeouts reduce expected performance and increase uncertainty; markets typically respond quickly to such signals. Consider the nature of the injury (acute vs precautionary), how it affects movement or serve, and whether the player returned to competitive level before set two.
Yes—surface speed and bounce influence tactical advantages: faster surfaces reward big serves and short points, while slower surfaces favor endurance-based baseline play. Identify which player’s strengths align with the surface when evaluating set-two prospects.
Exchanges commonly suspend trading during an official delay and either resume once play restarts or follow their stated cancellation/voiding rules if the event cannot be completed. Check the market’s status and the platform’s event-handling policy for definitive guidance.