Patrick Kypson reached the top 100 by the slowest road available to a former blue-chip junior — college, four surgeries, and a half-decade of Challenger laps. He turned professional in 2019 after a standout freshman season at Texas A&M, where he was named the 2018 ITA National Rookie of the Year; his career-high ATP singles ranking is No. 117, achieved in November 2025. The North Carolina pedigree runs deep: his roots are in Greenville, where Tommy Paul was also raised, and Kypson's first private coach was Paul's stepfather Randy Bailey. At A&M he shared a lineup — and a doubles court — with Arthur Rinderknech and Valentin Vacherot, the cousins who'd later meet in a Masters 1000 final.
The junior résumé was elite before the body intervened. He peaked at No. 18 in the junior rankings in 2017, reaching the 2016 US Open quarterfinals as a qualifier — losing to eventual champion Auger-Aliassime — and the 2017 Wimbledon semifinals, losing to eventual champion Davidovich Fokina. Both of those conquerors, Felix Auger-Aliassime and Alejandro Davidovich Fokina, settled into the tour's upper tier while Kypson was stuck in rehab cycles.
The injuries are the through-line. He underwent right elbow surgery in November 2021 and returned in June 2022, then kept tearing down: in April 2024 he hit a then-career-high of No. 133, but twelve months later had fallen outside the top 450 after fracturing his left foot in Australia — his fourth career surgery, costing him roughly three and a half months. A right-handed baseliner with a two-handed backhand built on hard courts, he's a margin player who wins by accumulation rather than blowing opponents off the court.
The current beat is a vindication tour. By 2025 he emerged as a force on the Challenger circuit, securing four titles that season and finally cracking the top 100 — now ranked 93, the kind of foothold that puts main-draw slam tennis and events like Delray Beach, where he beat Miomir Kecmanovic for his first tour-level win, squarely in reach.