| Outcome | Probability | Yes Bid | Yes Ask | 24h Change | Volume | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Grigor Dimitrov | 0% | 0¢ | 0¢ | — | $0 | Trade → |
| Raphael Collignon | 0% | 0¢ | 0¢ | — | $0 | Trade → |
This market predicts who will win the second set of the tennis match between Raphael Collignon and Grigor Dimitrov. It matters for traders and fans who want to make short-term decisions based on in-match developments.
Set-level markets isolate a single set outcome rather than the final match, so they are sensitive to immediate factors like momentum, in-match adjustments, and short-term fitness. Grigor Dimitrov is a well-known tour player with extensive best-of-three experience; Raphael Collignon represents the tournament opponent—set-level outcomes often favor the player who adapts faster between sets. Because the market closes relative to match timing, news that arrives between sets can materially shift expectations.
Market prices reflect the crowd’s assessment of who will win the second set based on available information and will move as new match events occur (set 1 score, injuries, weather, etc.). Use prices as a real-time signal of consensus, not a guarantee of outcome.
It settles on which player is recorded as the official winner of the second set according to the match scorekeeper; a tiebreak winner counts as the set winner.
Yes; a decisive Set 1 win often shifts momentum and may indicate tactical control, while a close or contested Set 1 suggests both players are competitive and adjustments between sets will be important.
A tiebreak winner is treated as the winner of the second set for settlement purposes, just as in standard match scoring.
Settlement follows the official match result: if an official second-set winner is recorded, that determines the market; if no official winner for set 2 is produced (match abandoned without a completed set), the platform’s voiding or contingency rules apply—check the market rules for specifics.
Watch Set 1 scoreline, serve stats (first-serve %, hold/breaks), break-point opportunities, visible fitness or treatment breaks, time between sets, and any tactical changes such as serve placement or net approaches.