Patrick Kypson was predicted to beat Aleksandar Vukic at the ATP Rome, Italy Men's Singles 2026 on Wednesday, according to a betting-style projection from Dimers.
Dimers said its predictive model simulated the match 10,000 times and gave Kypson a 74% win probability, compared with 26% for Vukic. The forecast pointed to Kypson as the likelier winner in the men’s singles event in Rome.
The prediction is part of Dimers’ broader matchup modeling for the tournament, which uses repeated simulations to estimate how often each player would come out on top. In this case, the numbers tilted sharply toward Kypson before the match was set to unfold in the ATP Rome, Italy Men's Singles 2026 draw.
That still leaves the same limitation that hangs over any pre-match model: the result has to be decided on court. The percentages show where the model landed, not how the points will be won or whether Vukic can push back against the forecast.
For now, the model has done what it was built to do. It put Kypson ahead, assigned Vukic the underdog role, and gave bettors and tennis watchers a numerical read on a Wednesday match in Rome.