| Outcome | Probability | Yes Bid | Yes Ask | 24h Change | Volume | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Arthur Fils | 0% | 0¢ | 0¢ | — | $0 | Trade → |
| Valentin Vacherot | 0% | 0¢ | 0¢ | — | $0 | Trade → |
This market asks which player will win the second set in the Valentin Vacherot vs Arthur Fils match and is useful for traders who want to focus on set-level performance rather than the match outcome. Set markets matter because they isolate short-term dynamics like momentum swings, serve dominance, and tactical adjustments.
Arthur Fils is a young, powerful baseline player known for aggressive shotmaking, while Valentin Vacherot is typically noted for consistency and solid point construction; their styles create clear tactical contrasts that play out within individual sets. Past meetings between the two, recent form in the tournament, and how each handled Set 1 can all alter expectations for Set 2. Surface and tournament conditions (court speed, balls, indoor/outdoor) further shape how their strengths translate into games.
Market prices represent the collective view of traders based on available information and will move as new data (score updates, injuries, weather) arrives; interpret them as indicators of market sentiment rather than immutable forecasts.
The market will be settled based on the official tournament result for Set 2 once the set is completed and the official scoring feed is reported; if the set is not completed, settlement follows the exchange's event-resolution policy.
Winning Set 2 means being recorded as the set winner under the tournament's scoring rules, including victory via a standard tiebreak if one is played and officially recorded.
If Set 2 is not played due to a pre-match withdrawal or walkover, most exchanges declare the market void; if a retirement occurs during Set 1 or Set 2, settlement will follow the official match report about the set's outcome.
Such events can shift trader sentiment and thus market prices in real time, but they do not change settlement criteria—the official recorded winner of Set 2 determines the final outcome.
Once the tournament's official scoring feed registers the Set 2 result, the exchange typically updates and settles the market within the timeframe determined by its data-processing procedures, which can range from near-immediate to a short delay.