| Outcome | Probability | Yes Bid | Yes Ask | 24h Change | Volume | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Chun Hsin Tseng | 0% | 1¢ | 99¢ | — | $0 | Trade → |
| Roman Andres Burruchaga | 0% | 1¢ | 99¢ | — | $0 | Trade → |
This market asks which player will win the second set of the singles match between Roman Andres Burruchaga and Chun Hsin Tseng. It matters because single-set markets isolate in-match dynamics and are sensitive to momentum, tactical adjustments, and short-term physical condition.
Both competitors are professional tennis players competing in the same match; set-level markets focus on one segment of that match rather than the final result. Set 2 can swing differently from set 1 because players make tactical changes, recover physically, or react to psychological momentum after the opening set. Historical form and surface familiarity can shape expectations but will vary match by match.
Market odds reflect traders’ collective expectations and available liquidity for this specific set outcome and will update as match events occur. Use odds as a snapshot of the market view at a given moment, not an immutable prediction.
The winner is the player officially recorded as having won the second set on the tournament’s official scoreline; markets settle to the official match record published by the event organizers or the recognized governing body.
If the second set is not started due to a walkover or retirement before set 2 begins, settlement depends on the platform’s rules—some markets are voided or refunded, while others follow official notation; check the market’s specific settlement policy for this event.
A tiebreak is part of set 2; the player who wins the tiebreak is recorded as the winner of set 2, and the market settles to that official outcome.
The market will settle based on the official set 2 result once play is completed and an official score is posted; if the match is canceled outright, settlement will follow the platform’s cancellation and voiding rules.
Settlement relies on the tournament’s official scoreboard and results bulletin or the recognized governing body’s official feed (as cited by the platform); those official sources determine the recorded set 2 winner.