Patrick Kypson Enters as Heavy Favourite Against Aleksandar Vukic at ATP Italian Open 2026 — Full Match Breakdown

Patrick Kypson enters the 2026 ATP Italian Open Round of 128 in Rome riding qualifying momentum and a commanding 74% win probability over Aleksandar Vukic.

Two Mid-Ranked Players, One Big Opportunity in Rome

The historic clay courts of Rome’s Foro Italico host a fascinating first-round clash at the 2026 ATP Italian Open, as Australian veteran Aleksandar Vukic takes on rising American Patrick Kypson in the Round of 128.

Advanced predictive models have simulated the outcome of this match 10,000 times, and the numbers strongly favour Kypson — giving the American a 74% chance of defeating Vukic at the ATP Italian Open tournament. Dimer’s

But numbers only tell part of the story. This is clay-court tennis in Rome — a surface that rewards patience, heavy topspin, and mental endurance. With both players sitting comfortably outside the top 80 in the world rankings, every match here represents a real opportunity to make a statement. So what can we expect when these two step onto the Foro Italico clay?


Match Details

Detail Info
Tournament ATP Italian Open (Internazionali BNL d’Italia) 2026
Round Round of 128 (First Round)
Surface Clay
Venue Foro Italico, Rome, Italy
Date Wednesday, May 6, 2026
Time 10:00 AM ET / 3:05 PM BST

Player Profiles: Who Are These Two?

Aleksandar Vukic — World No. 99

Vukic, 30, arrives in Rome ranked World No. 99. The Australian has been a solid presence on the ATP Tour for several years, known for a powerful serve and aggressive baseline game. He has previous experience at this tournament, having reached the second round in both 2024 and 2025. MatchStat

However, 2026 has been a deeply frustrating season for him. Vukic enters this match on a seven-match losing run, most recently losing to Marcos Giron in three sets on the Challenger Tour in Cagliari — a performance that summed up his inconsistent year. The Stats Zone

His 2026 year-to-date record stands at a concerning 6 wins and 14 losses, including a dismal 0 wins and 5 losses on clay specifically this season. Despite having a positive career clay-court record overall (97 wins, 82 losses), his current form on the surface is alarming. Tennis Tonic

Vukic 2026 Season Snapshot:

  • Overall record: 6–14
  • Clay-court record in 2026: 0–5
  • Best result in 2026: Quarter-final in Adelaide
  • Last match: Lost to Marcos Giron 6-4, 1-6, 6-1 (Cagliari Challenger, April 28)
  • Current ranking: World No. 99
Patrick Kypson — World No. 89

Kypson, 26, enters this match ranked World No. 89 — his career-high ranking. The American is four years younger than Vukic and has clearly built significant momentum heading into Rome. MatchStat

Kypson’s best result this season was a semi-final appearance on the Challenger Tour in San Diego, and he also produced one of the biggest upsets of the year’s early months by defeating Alex de Minaur in the first round of the Mexican Open in February. The Stats Zone

Crucially, Kypson enters this first-round match with genuine momentum — he battled through qualifying at this very tournament, defeating Jack Pinnington Jones before grinding past Titouan Droguet in a gruelling three-set qualifying final. The Stats Zone

During the qualifying matches, Kypson demonstrated excellent serving, winning 74% of first-serve points and 66% of second-serve points — statistics that bode well for his performance on a clay surface where reliability is everything. Tennis Tonic

Kypson 2026 Season Snapshot:

  • Overall record: 12–15
  • Clay-court record in 2026: 4–5
  • Best result in 2026: Semi-final at San Diego Challenger
  • Qualifying wins at Rome: Defeated Jack Pinnington Jones (6-7, 7-6, 6-3) and Titouan Droguet (7-6, 6-7, 7-6)
  • Current ranking: World No. 89

Head-to-Head Record: Perfectly Balanced — Until Now

Vukic and Kypson hold a perfectly balanced head-to-head record of 1–1 across two career meetings, with sets equally split at 2–2. Vukic has won more total games in their series (24–20), but Kypson holds the more important recent result. MatchStat

Their most recent meeting took place at Cincinnati Open qualifying in August 2025, where Kypson won convincingly 7-6(3), 7-6(4) — a performance that highlighted his ability to stay composed in high-pressure tiebreak situations. MatchStat

One key fact stands out heading into Rome: this will be only the third time these two players have competed against each other, and they have never previously faced each other on clay. That means both players step onto genuinely unfamiliar ground against each other in terms of surface-specific history — giving the matchup an unpredictable edge. Tennis Tonic

Head-to-Head Summary:

  • Overall: Kypson leads 1–1 (evenly split)
  • Sets: 2–2 overall
  • Games won: Vukic leads 24–20
  • Last meeting: Kypson won 7-6(3), 7-6(4) — Cincinnati qualifying, August 2025
  • Clay meetings: None previously

Form Analysis: Momentum Matters on Clay

Clay-court tennis rewards players who arrive with rhythm and match sharpness. On that measure, the two players enter this match in starkly different positions.

Vukic has lost seven matches in a row. His last win on any surface came weeks ago, and his clay-court form in 2026 is nothing short of catastrophic — five losses from five clay matches this season. On a surface that punishes hesitation and rewards aggressive baseline construction, a player without confidence and match rhythm is extremely vulnerable.

Kypson, by contrast, arrives with genuine momentum. He has already played and won three matches in Rome this week through qualifying, which means he carries live match sharpness onto the court against Vukic. The Stats Zone

The time on court during qualifying could be a factor — Kypson’s qualifying final against Droguet lasted 3 hours and 11 minutes, a punishing battle that required significant physical and mental energy. On the other hand, that match also sharpened his timing and battle-readiness in ways that a player coming straight into the first round without prior matches simply cannot replicate. MatchStat


What the Models Say: Kypson the Clear Favourite

The predictive model — drawing from 10,000 simulations — gives Kypson a 74% chance of winning the match and a 69% chance of winning the first set. Dimer’s

The model also shows that Vukic (+4.5 games) has a 53% chance of covering the games spread, while the over 21.5 total games line has a 51% probability of hitting. Dimer’s

In the betting markets, Kypson carries an implied probability of around 73%, while Vukic sits at roughly 30% — numbers that align closely with what the simulation models project. MatchStat

Model Probabilities at a Glance:

  • Kypson win probability: 74%
  • Vukic win probability: 26%
  • Kypson wins first set: 69%
  • Vukic covers +4.5 games spread: 53%
  • Over 21.5 games: 51%

Clay-Court Tactical Breakdown

Both players carry remarkably similar serve statistics in recent form — break-point save rates of 56% for Kypson and 55% for Vukic, and identical second-serve winning percentages of 48% each. On paper, the serving battle could be razor-thin. MatchStat

Where Kypson earns a genuine edge is in his return game. Kypson’s second-serve return winning percentage of 44% gives him a meaningful platform on clay — a surface where second-serve returns become more dangerous because slower bounces give the returner extra time to load up and drive through the ball. MatchStat

The head-to-head history between these two already features multiple tiebreaks, which suggests neither player generates many clean break looks — meaning individual high-leverage points become disproportionately important. On clay, where long, grinding rallies are the norm, Kypson’s superior fitness heading into this match (given his qualifying matches) could prove decisive in the latter stages of a close set. MatchStat


Our Prediction: Kypson to Win in Three Sets

Both players carry vulnerabilities heading into this match, but the overall picture firmly favours Kypson.

Vukic’s seven-match losing streak, his 0–5 clay record in 2026, and his lack of recent match sharpness make him a very risky proposition on this surface. Even his supporters would acknowledge that he needs early momentum to stay competitive — and Kypson’s qualifying victories suggest he will not make life easy.

Kypson enters this match under less psychological pressure than his opponent, which on clay — a surface that punishes tentative play — represents a real competitive advantage. The Stats Zone

The projected scoreline leans toward Kypson edging a tight match in three sets, with at least one set stretching deep — something like 7-6, 4-6, 6-4 — given the historical tendency of this matchup to produce tiebreaks and the unpredictability of clay-court play. MatchStat

Our Pick: Patrick Kypson to win — 7-6, 4-6, 6-3


Key Betting Markets to Watch

  • Match winner: Kypson is the clear favourite — consistent with model projections and current form
  • First set winner: Kypson holds a 69% probability of winning the opening set — a strong market given his qualifying momentum
  • Total games over/under: The 51% probability on over 21.5 games makes this a near coin-flip — only worth targeting if live match dynamics present a clear opportunity
  • Games spread (Vukic +4.5): At 53%, this narrow edge offers modest value if you believe Vukic competes despite the losing run

Always bet responsibly and within your means.


Final Summary

Category Advantage
Current form Kypson ✅
Clay record in 2026 Kypson ✅
World ranking Kypson (No. 89 vs No. 99) ✅
Match sharpness Kypson (3 qualifying wins) ✅
H2H recent result Kypson ✅
Experience at this level Vukic (slight) ✅
Overall model probability Kypson — 74% ✅
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