AI Tennis Predictions on Telegram — What You Get Daily

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Every day with ATP matches on the schedule, our AI models generate predictions and we send them directly to our Telegram channel. No app to install, no account to create — open Telegram, join, and you start receiving predictions on your phone.

This page shows you exactly what you get.

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Free. No signup. Predictions delivered daily to your phone.

Join @PredixSportOfficial Also covers NBA and Football predictions

What a Daily Prediction Looks Like

Here's an actual message from our channel — the Alcaraz vs Sinner prediction for the Monte Carlo Masters 2026:

PredixSport Telegram channel message showing AI tennis prediction for Carlos Alcaraz vs Jannik Sinner at Monte Carlo Masters 2026, with winner probability, expected games, aces, and double faults

Real prediction from the PredixSport Telegram channel — April 12, 2026

Each message gives you the key numbers at a glance. The buttons at the bottom link directly to the full match analysis on our site, where you get interactive probability distribution charts and downloadable data.

What Each Prediction Includes

Every tennis prediction message contains five data points, all generated by dedicated neural network models:

Match Winner

Who the model thinks will win, with the exact win probability. In the example above: Sinner at 53.5%, meaning a close match where the model slightly favors the world number two on clay.

Expected Total Games

The model's expected value for total games played. 23.1 games in Alcaraz vs Sinner suggests the model anticipates a three-set match going deep — roughly 7-5, 6-4 territory.

Expected Aces

Combined aces for both players. 9.4 expected aces in a clay-court Masters match tells you the model expects moderate serving power — typical for a baseline-heavy matchup on slow courts.

Expected Double Faults

Combined double faults. At 5.7, the model expects clean serving from both players. Higher numbers here often correlate with aggressive second serves or fatigue later in tournaments.

Direct Links

Every prediction includes a tap-through button to the full match analysis page on predixsport.com — with interactive probability charts, detailed model output, and downloadable data in JSON or CSV.

What You Find When You Tap Through

The Telegram message is the summary. The full picture is on the match analysis page. When you tap a match button, you get:

  • Probability distribution charts — not just "23 expected games," but the probability of 18 games, 20 games, 25 games, and every other outcome
  • CDF (cumulative) charts — see the probability of over/under any threshold at a glance
  • Distributions for all metrics — total games, spread, aces, and double faults each have their own chart
  • Downloadable data — export the full probability distributions as JSON or CSV for your own analysis

Tournaments We Cover

We generate predictions for every match across the full ATP calendar:

Grand Slams Australian Open, Roland Garros, Wimbledon, US Open
Masters 1000 Indian Wells, Miami, Monte Carlo, Madrid, Rome, Canada, Cincinnati, Shanghai, Paris
ATP 500 Rotterdam, Dubai, Barcelona, Halle, Queen's, Hamburg, Beijing, Basel, Vienna
ATP 250 Full calendar coverage including qualifying rounds where available

Predictions are sent each morning before the first match of the day. On busy days with 20+ matches across multiple tournaments, we send a curated selection of the most interesting matchups to keep the channel readable, with a link to view all predictions on the site.

How the Models Work

Four separate neural network models power the predictions you see in each message. One predicts the match winner, and three Poisson-based models predict total games, aces, and double faults. They share a common input pipeline but are trained independently for each task.

The input features include:

  • Proprietary ELO and Glicko-2 ratings — updated after every match, with surface-specific variants
  • Surface and form indices — our custom metrics that track player performance by surface type and recent form
  • Head-to-head records — historical matchup data weighted by recency and surface
  • Tournament context — round, surface, altitude, tournament tier (a player who dominates ATP 250s may not replicate that at a Grand Slam)
  • Fatigue and scheduling — days since last match, matches played in the tournament, travel distance
Want the full technical details?
Read our methodology articles: Tennis ELO Ratings, Surface & Form Indices, and Understanding Probability Distributions.

Not Just Tennis

The same channel sends predictions for NBA (win probability, total points, spread, plus per-player projections) and football across five European leagues (Premier League, Serie A, La Liga, Bundesliga, Ligue 1). One channel, three sports, every day there are matches.

Join @PredixSportOfficial

Daily AI tennis predictions with winner probabilities, expected games, aces, and double faults. Plus full probability distributions one tap away. Free, no signup required.

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