| Outcome | Probability | Yes Bid | Yes Ask | 24h Change | Volume | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Stefanos Tsitsipas | 0% | 1¢ | 78¢ | — | $0 | Trade → |
| Denis Shapovalov | 0% | 1¢ | 76¢ | — | $0 | Trade → |
This market settles on which player—Stefanos Tsitsipas or Denis Shapovalov—wins the second set of their match. It matters because set-level markets focus on short-term match dynamics and are sensitive to momentum, in-play adjustments, and physical condition between sets.
Stefanos Tsitsipas and Denis Shapovalov are high-profile tour players with aggressive, offensive styles; Tsitsipas is a right‑handed player with a one‑handed backhand, Shapovalov is a left‑handed big-hitter. They have met multiple times on tour and matches between them can feature quick momentum swings, high-risk shotmaking, and fluctuating serve dominance—factors that make set-level outcomes especially uncertain.
Market prices reflect the collective view of traders and update as new information (first-set result, injury, weather, in-match tactics) becomes available; they indicate market sentiment about who will win set 2 but are not guarantees of the actual outcome.
The market resolves once the second set is completed and the tournament's official scorekeeper records the winner of set 2; the platform uses that official result as the settlement reference.
A tiebreak is considered part of the second set; the player who wins the tiebreak is recorded as the winner of set 2 and the market will settle to that player.
If a retirement or default occurs during set 2, the opponent is normally recorded by officials as the winner of that set and the market settles to that player; if the second set was not started or an unusual official ruling applies, settlement follows the platform's stated resolution rules.
Key developments include the first-set score and manner of play (straightforward win vs tight finish), visible physical issues or medical treatment, tactical adjustments made by either player, and early breaks or service-stance changes at the start of set 2.
Consider how the surface affects serve and rally length—faster courts tend to favor aggressive servers and quick points, while slower courts reward sustained rallies and defensive retrieval—plus whether conditions are indoor/outdoor and any local factors (wind, altitude) that can alter ball behavior and player effectiveness.