| Outcome | Probability | Yes Bid | Yes Ask | 24h Change | Volume | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Lorenzo Musetti | 0% | 0¢ | 0¢ | — | $0 | Trade → |
| Rafael Jodar | 0% | 0¢ | 0¢ | — | $0 | Trade → |
This market asks which player will win the second set in the tennis match between Lorenzo Musetti and Rafael Jodar. It matters to traders and fans who want to express views on in-match momentum and single-set performance rather than the full-match outcome.
Lorenzo Musetti and Rafael Jodar are competing in a professional-level match where each set is scored independently; set-level markets focus on short-run dynamics such as serve holds and quick momentum shifts. Past meetings, surface preferences, and recent form can shape expectations for individual sets even if one player is favored for the overall match.
Odds in this market reflect the market’s aggregated view of which player is more likely to win set 2 at the time of trading; they update as new information arrives (e.g., set 1 result, injury news, weather). Traders should view prices as a real-time snapshot of consensus beliefs, not definitive forecasts.
The market closes and settles based on the platform’s published schedule; closure is typically before the start of the second set and settlement uses the match’s official scorer to determine who won set 2. Check the platform for the exact close time, which is listed as TBD for this event.
Winning Set 2 means being recorded as the official victor of the second set on the match scorecard, including any standard tiebreak procedures used to decide a 6-6 set; the player awarded the set in official records is the winner for settlement.
If an injury or retirement occurs before the completion of set 2 and the platform’s rules specify voiding or a particular settlement treatment, the market will follow those rules; if the official result awards the set to one player, settlement follows that official outcome. Refer to the platform’s market rules for exact handling.
Set 1 provides informational value—confidence, momentum, and tactical adjustments can change expectations—but it does not deterministically determine set 2; markets update to reflect how players are performing and any observable changes between sets.
Head-to-head results, recent matches on the same surface, and each player’s short-set performance and tiebreak record are relevant context. Use those patterns to assess tendencies (e.g., how each responds after losing a set) rather than relying on them as fixed predictors.