| Outcome | Probability | Yes Bid | Yes Ask | 24h Change | Volume | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Jiri Lehecka | 0% | 0¢ | 0¢ | — | $0 | Trade → |
| Martin Landaluce | 0% | 0¢ | 0¢ | — | $0 | Trade → |
This market asks which player—Martin Landaluce or Jiri Lehecka—will win the second set of their match. Set-level markets matter because they isolate short-term dynamics like momentum shifts, tactical adjustments, and in-match physical factors.
Jiri Lehecka is an established tour player with more ATP-level experience; Martin Landaluce is a younger, up-and-coming competitor with a developing game. The second set often reflects how each player adapts after the first set, and head-to-head history between them may be limited, so recent form and match-specific conditions can be especially influential.
Prediction market odds summarize how traders collectively view the chances of each player winning the second set and will update as in-match information (first-set result, injuries, conditions) becomes available. Treat odds as a moving consensus signal, not a certainty.
The market resolves to whichever player is officially recorded as the winner of the match's second set; if the set is decided by a tiebreak, the tiebreak winner is the set winner. Resolution follows the match's official scoreline as reported by the event operator.
The close time is listed as TBD for this market; platforms that offer set-level markets typically close trading before the second set begins. Check the specific market page for the exact closure time and any platform-specific notices.
Resolution in those scenarios is governed by the platform's market rules: common outcomes include voiding the market if the second set never starts or applying a defined policy if play is abandoned mid-set. Refer to the market's terms and settlement rules for definitive guidance.
The first-set result affects momentum, confidence, and possible tactical shifts; a comfortable first-set win can change how a player approaches set two and will usually prompt rapid market updates reflecting those in-match developments.
Key signs include each player's serve hold/break frequency, success returning the opponent's serve, movement and footspeed, any medical treatment or visible fatigue, and the nature of adjustments discussed or deployed between sets.