| Outcome | Probability | Yes Bid | Yes Ask | 24h Change | Volume | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Tommy Paul | 0% | 0¢ | 0¢ | — | $0 | Trade → |
| Arthur Fils | 0% | 0¢ | 0¢ | — | $0 | Trade → |
This market asks which player, Tommy Paul or Arthur Fils, will win the second set of their match. It matters for traders who want to take positions on short-term, in-match dynamics rather than the final match outcome.
Tommy Paul and Arthur Fils are professional tennis players with contrasting styles: one typically builds points with consistent baseline play while the other often uses aggressive shotmaking and pace. The tournament surface, recent form, head-to-head history, and any pre-match fitness reports all provide context that shapes expectations for an individual set.
Prediction market odds here represent the market’s real-time consensus about who is most likely to win set 2 given current information (including the first-set result and live match developments). Treat those odds as a snapshot that can move quickly as new on-court information arrives.
Set 1 outcome is a major input: the winner of set 1 often carries momentum and confidence into set 2, while the loser may need to adapt tactically. Traders also update expectations based on how convincing the set 1 performance looked (service holds, break opportunities, unforced errors).
Resolution depends on the exchange’s official settlement rules. Many platforms require the set to have been started or completed to declare a winner; if a set isn’t played or is abandoned, markets may be voided or settled according to specific rule provisions. Check the event’s terms on the trading platform for exact procedures.
Notable events include visible injuries or medical timeouts, a player receiving intensive on-court treatment, clear tactical changes observed in warm-up, weather or lighting delays, and any late withdrawal or postponement. Each can materially change traders’ expectations for the next set.
Serving first determines the sequence of holds and return opportunities across games and can affect early pressure in the set. A player who begins serving may have the chance to set the tone immediately, while the returner can aim to secure an early break — both scenarios shift short-term dynamics that markets price.
Closure timing varies by platform: some markets close at match start, others remain open until the start of the specific set or until the exchange announces a cut-off. Since this event’s close is listed as TBD, monitor the trading interface or official event page on the exchange for the definitive close time and any real-time updates.