If you haven’t heard the name Alex Eala yet, consider this your official heads-up.
The 20-year-old from the Philippines has been on an absolute tear through the WTA, knocking off some of the biggest names in women’s tennis — and she hasn’t even turned 21. (Her birthday is May 23, for anyone who wants to mark the calendar.)
We’re talking wins over Iga Świątek, Madison Keys, Jeļena Ostapenko, and Coco Gauff. That’s not a wish list. That’s her actual résumé. And her most recent results should push her into the top 30 for the first time in her career.
Alex Eala’s Miami Open Run Was Genuinely WildLet’s rewind to the 2025 Miami Open, because that’s when Eala went from “name to watch” to “wait, who is she and how is she doing this?”
Eala, who was 19 at the time, entered as a wildcard. She then proceeded to defeat Ostapenko, Keys, and Świątek — all in straight sets — before falling to Jessica Pegula in the semifinals of the Miami Open.
She was the first wildcard in history to beat three major champions in straight sets at a single WTA event, and the first Filipino woman to defeat a major champion at a tour-level event in the Open Era.
That run shot her into the WTA’s top 100 for the first time — another first. She ended March 2025 ranked No. 75, then climbed to No. 50 by the end of the season.
Alex Eala Brought the Drama at the 2026 Indian Wells OpenEala carried that energy straight into 2026. At the Indian Wells Open, she reached the fourth round of singles before losing to Linda Noskova.
A fourth-round finish at a WTA 1000 event is a real statement for a player still building her ranking.
But the match everyone was talking about? Her second-round battle against world No. 52 Dayana Yastremska. It lasted 2 hours and 43 minutes — the longest match of the entire day — and Eala pulled out a three-set win.
The stadium stayed packed the whole time, with fans sticking around past midnight.
“For them to make the effort to stay up late and stay in the cold and cheer me on, it really added to the feelings and the emotions,” Eala told reporters after the match.
She followed that up with a third-round win over Gauff (another major champion), who withdrew in the second set due to injury.
The Fan Energy Around Alex Eala Is Next-LevelHere’s where the Eala story gets really fun. She’s not just winning matches — she’s drawing the kind of crowds you’d expect for Carlos Alcaraz or Jannik Sinner.
Fans are packing stadiums for her matches. Hundreds are even showing up just to watch her practice.
“I did not expect this sort of fanbase or crowd rallying behind me,” Eala told Front Office Sports in an interview published March 7. “But it’s an incredible privilege to have, I tell you. And it’s not something your everyday person can experience, so I’m always so grateful.”
A huge part of that energy is coming from the Filipino community. Longtime Filipino sports journalist TJ Manotoc put it bluntly for FOS.
“The country has been hungry for the next Manny Pacquiao,” Manotoc told FOS. “When he was at his peak, life stopped. When there’s a fight, nothing’s on the road. Everyone’s watching.”
Eala is generating that kind of national excitement — in a sport that hasn’t traditionally been the Philippines’ primary athletic export.
Alex Eala Has Been Making Her Mark on Women’s Tennis Since She Was 14Eala turned pro in March 2020 at age 14, about six months after making her junior Grand Slam tournament debut at the 2019 US Open. She won the girls’ doubles title at the Australian Open in January 2020.
Things moved fast from there. In January 2021, she became the youngest and lowest-seeded junior reserve to win an ITF title at the W15 Manacor event in Spain. That win got her into the WTA rankings for the first time, inside the top 1000.
She made her WTA Tour debut in August 2021 at the Winners Open in Romania, becoming the first Filipino to win a tour-level match.
Then came the junior Grand Slam breakthrough: she became the first Filipino woman to win a junior Grand Slam singles title at the 2022 US Open, at age 17.
She entered Grand Slam qualifying for the first time at the 2023 Australian Open, and by the end of 2024 had racked up five ITF singles titles and three ITF doubles titles.
Sports Runs in the Family for Alex EalaThe competitive fire makes sense when you look at Eala’s family.
Her mother, Rizza Maniego-Eala, won a bronze medal in the women’s 100m backstroke at the 1985 Southeast Asian Games, according to Rappler.
Rizza’s sister is a former national swimmer, and her brother played tennis for the University of the Philippines varsity after competing as a swimmer.
Alex’s older brother, Miko, is also a tennis player at the Rafael Nadal Academy — the same academy Alex Eala came out of.
And the family connection to Filipino sports goes even deeper: she’s related to former sports commentator and PBA commissioner Noli Eala, who led the pro basketball league from 2003 to 2005.
As for her rise in the tennis world, the numbers tell the story.
Eala went from No. 75 at the end of March 2025 to No. 50 by season’s end, and she’s about to break into the top 30 before her 21st birthday.
She’s beaten three major champions in straight sets at a single event, survived a nearly three-hour marathon against a top-60 opponent, and attracted the kind of fan frenzy most players spend entire careers hoping for.
If you’re looking for the next big name in women’s tennis, she’s already here.








