It is not clear how relevant Fargo Ratings are for one-pocket--a game where some specialized knowledge/skill plays a big role.
But even forgetting that, I don't think people should think about Fargo Ratings as predicting a match score. In fact, it is fair to say FargoRate predicts when two players are 60 points apart that there is sometimes a blowout in one direction, sometimes a blowout in the other direction, sometimes an upset, and so forth. What it does, even when it IS working correctly, is predict a long-term ratio of games won.
In this case, I noted the score after yesterday, compared it to that long-term ratio, and found they matched. I thought people might be interested to know that--not in a looky-here-we-got-it-right sense, but rather just as a point of interest. When Tony wins a match by a bunch against Dennis, there is nothing to point out. The lower-rated player won by a bunch....OK. Nobody is confused about how that compared to the long-term expectation from Fargo Ratings.
Again you should not think of Fargo Ratings as predicting a match score. Sure there is a match score that is most likely, but it is not much more likely than adjacent scores and collectively a particular match score is quite unlikely