HIGHS AND LOWS: Tracking Alex Eala progress post-Miami dream run

Eala still searching for some form of stability and consistency since her historic run at the Miami Open to prove that she belongs among the best in the world
WHAT a wild ride Alex Eala is having in a tennis career that is speeding like a bullet train. She is up one day, down the next and one does not know what will happen next as her Filipino fans follow her trajectory with bated breath.
But lately, the fun and exhiliration are missing, dampened by early exits and inexplainable inconsistencies with losses coming from players below her current ranking.
Take her last outing in the French Open. She drew Emiliana Arango of Colombia for her first round match. That pairing appeared like heaven-sent. Arango has a higher ranking, 88 againsts her 69.
But during the match, Eala played like she was the underdog rather than the favorite, losing the first set 6-0. She came back strong in the second, winning it 6-2, but in the third set, she seemed to have lost her focus, maybe because the Columbian was playing with more determination and agression and Eala could not keep up.
Overall, however, Eala’s record remains phenomenal. She reached 69th in the world, though that ranking slid a few notches down, she will continue to get entry to many top tier events without having to go through quaifying.
Helping her reach this stage of her career can be credited to that one magical week in the Miami Open where she got a wild card and parlayed it to the best week of her tennis life.
In one electric succession, she beat Jelena Ostapenko, Madison Keys, Paula Badosa, and world No. 2 Iga Swiatek to reach the semifinals, where she met the end of her run at the hands of Jessica Pegula.
That streak made her a national hero, entered the country’s consciousness and people no longer asked “Alex Eala who?”
Post-Miami in March, Eala climbed from No. 140 to No. 72, gaining 390 points.
Just a week later, she joined the Oeiras Ladies Open (WTA 125) and made it to the Round of 16 before losing to Panna Udvardy, 7-6(4), 6-4 — who was then ranked No. 137 in the world.
