| Outcome | Probability | Yes Bid | Yes Ask | 24h Change | Volume | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Vit Kopriva | 0% | 1¢ | 99¢ | — | $0 | Trade → |
| Michael Zheng | 0% | 1¢ | 99¢ | — | $0 | Trade → |
This market determines which player—Michael Zheng or Vit Kopriva—wins the second set of their match. It matters for traders who want to isolate set-level performance rather than the overall match outcome.
The market is tied to a single professional tennis match and resolves based on the official record of Set 2. Set-level markets highlight short-term dynamics: tactical adjustments between sets, momentum swings, and physical condition can matter more than long-term form.
Market odds reflect collective expectations about who will win Set 2 at the time of trading; they update continuously as information (score, injuries, weather, live momentum) becomes available. Use odds as a snapshot of market sentiment, not as a guarantee of outcome.
The outcome is determined by the official match record for Set 2: the player recorded as winning the second set when that set is completed becomes the market winner.
If Set 2 is decided by a tiebreak, the player who wins the tiebreak is recorded as the Set 2 winner and therefore is the market outcome.
Resolution in cases of postponement or abandonment depends on the platform's event rules; typically the market waits for an official completion of Set 2 or follows the platform's stated policy, so check the event page for the specific settlement rules.
Injuries and medical timeouts materially change expected chances for Set 2 because they affect mobility and endurance; watch official medical information and live scoring updates, as markets will usually react quickly to such news.
Look at recent match patterns for each player (second-set resilience, comeback frequency), head-to-head tendencies if available, live stats from Set 1 (service hold/break points), and any coach comments or visible physical issues during the match.