| Outcome | Probability | Yes Bid | Yes Ask | 24h Change | Volume | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Mackenzie McDonald | 0% | 1¢ | 98¢ | — | $0 | Trade → |
| Vitaliy Sachko | 0% | 1¢ | 98¢ | — | $0 | Trade → |
This market asks which player will win the second set in the tennis match between Vitaliy Sachko and Mackenzie McDonald. It matters for traders who want to isolate set-level outcomes rather than the overall match result.
Set-level markets focus on a single set’s outcome within a match and are influenced by short-term momentum, serve dynamics, and tactical adjustments between sets. Vitaliy Sachko and Mackenzie McDonald are competing in a standard professional match format where each set is decided by games and, if applicable, a tiebreak; surface, fitness, and match conditions will shape how set 2 plays out.
Market odds reflect the collective expectations of traders about who will win the second set and can change in real time as play and new information arrive. Interpret shifts as market participants reacting to in-match events (first-set result, injuries, momentum) rather than fixed predictions.
The market settles on which player is officially recorded as the winner of the second set. If the set is completed, the official scorecard determines the winner; if the set does not reach a conclusive result, settlement follows the exchange's official rules.
The event page currently lists the market close as TBD. Some platforms close markets when play begins for the relevant set or at a scheduled time—check the event page for real-time closing information.
If set 2 reaches a tiebreak, the player who wins the tiebreak is the official winner of set 2, and the market settles accordingly. Any specific tiebreak-format exceptions would be covered by the exchange's settlement rules.
If a retirement or default occurs during set 2, the opponent is typically recorded as winning that set for official scoring; however, final settlement follows the platform’s documented rules for retirements and unfinished sets, so consult those rules for edge cases.
Yes—traders often consider head-to-head tendencies, prior set-level outcomes, and how each player has performed on the event surface, but those historical inputs are just one of several factors that market participants weigh when forming expectations for set 2.