| Outcome | Probability | Yes Bid | Yes Ask | 24h Change | Volume | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Benjamin Bonzi | 0% | 0¢ | 0¢ | — | $0 | Trade → |
| Rafael Jodar | 0% | 0¢ | 0¢ | — | $0 | Trade → |
This market asks which player, Rafael Jodar or Benjamin Bonzi, will win the second set of their match. Set-specific markets matter because they isolate short-term performance and in-match adjustments that differ from full-match outcomes.
Both players bring different playing styles, recent form, and tactical approaches that can shape a single set; set 2 is often influenced by what happened in set 1 and by any halftime adjustments. The market focuses only on the second set outcome and will be settled according to the exchange's rules if play is interrupted by retirement, default, or suspension.
Market odds aggregate participants' expectations for who will win set 2 and can change rapidly as live match events occur; they should be read as a real-time consensus signal, not a certainty.
The market is settled based on which player wins the second set under normal play; a set decided by a standard tiebreak is treated as a won set for the tiebreak victor. Final settlement follows the exchange's official rules if the set is not completed.
A first-set result commonly changes expectations for set 2 by shifting momentum and prompting tactical changes; traders typically update positions based on who won set 1, observed energy levels, and any strategic adjustments.
If a player retires or is defaulted before or during the second set, markets are usually settled according to the exchange's stated rules—often awarding the set to the non-retiring player or voiding the market if play never reaches the set. Check the exchange's official settlement policy for this event.
Monitor first-serve percentage, break points saved and converted, return effectiveness, winners vs unforced errors, visible fatigue or medical visits, and the length/intensity of set 1 for clues about likely set 2 performance.
Set-level markets reflect short-term dynamics—small-sample variance, immediate momentum swings, and single-set tactical plays—so live information and in-match adjustments tend to move set markets more quickly and sometimes in different directions than match-winner markets.