Alex Eala plays in the main draw of the Australian Open for the first time with hopes of having a deep run as she looks to build on her promising start to 2026Alex Eala plays in the main draw of the Australian Open for the first time with hopes of having a deep run as she looks to build on her promising start to 2026

What awaits Alex Eala in breakthrough Australian Open campaign?

2026/01/17 11:00

MANILA, Philippines – History once again beckons for Alex Eala as she sees action in the main draw of the Australian Open.

It will be the first main draw appearance for the Filipina in the first Grand Slam of the year after she crashed out of the first round of the qualifiers in each of the past three years.

By virtue of her career-high world No. 49 ranking, Eala gets a direct entry to the round of 128, where she will face Alycia Parks on Monday, January 19.

First-round challenge

While Parks is ranked lower at No. 100, she still provides Eala a serious challenge, having enjoyed her finest Grand Slam run in the Australian Open. 

In 2024, the American went as far as the third round as she beat Czech Republic’s Sara Bejlek and Canada’s Leylah Fernandez before she fell to compatriot Coco Gauff.

Parks also reached the second round of the French Open and Wimbledon and she owns a WTA Tour title after ruling the Lyon Open in 2023, the same year she notched a career-high ranking of No. 40. 

In contrast, Eala has gotten past the opening round of a Grand Slam just once when she stunned Denmark’s Clara Tauson in the 2025 US Open. 

But recent results favor Eala. 

Eala started the year strong with a semifinal run in the ASB Classic in Auckland, New Zealand, where she defeated Croatia’s Donna Vekic and Petra Marcinko and Poland’s Magda Linette before she absorbed a close loss to China’s Wang Xinyu, falling short of a title clash with eventual champion Elena Svitolina of Ukraine.

The 20-year-old Filipina then toppled Vekic again in the Kooyoung Classic, her final Australian Open warm-up event, which she eventually ruled on Friday, January 16, to capture the Evonne Goolagong Cawley Trophy.

Meanwhile, Parks enters the Australian Open with a 1-2 record to begin 2026 following early exits in the ASB Classic and Hobart International.

Parks lost to Italy’s Elisabetta Cocciaretto in the first round of the ASB Classic then barely missed the main draw of the Hobart International, bowing to Japan’s Ayano Shimizu in the second round of the qualifiers. 

Who’s next?

If Eala manages to see off Parks, tougher opponents await as she faces the winner between Czech Republic’s Karolina Muchova and Romania’s Jacqueline Cristian in the second round. 

Muchova knows what it takes to go deep in a Grand Slam as she reached at least the quarterfinals in all of the four majors.

The world No. 19 Czech advanced to the final of the French Open in 2023, losing to six-time Grand Slam champion Iga Swiatek of Poland, and played in the semifinals of the Australian Open (2021) and US Open (2023 and 2024). 

Meanwhile, world No. 37 Cristian is coming off a solid 2025 campaign that saw her make it to the third round of the Australian Open, French Open, and US Open. 

A potential third-round opponent is world No. 15 Emma Navarro of the USA, a quarterfinalist in the previous Australian Open.

World No. 3 Gauff is also in the same bracket, with the American expected to contend as she chases her third major title. 

American world No. 9 Madison Keys, whom Eala shocked in the 2025 Miami Open, returns as the defending champion after she denied world No. 1 Aryna Sabalenka of a three-peat in the last Australian Open. 

Hefty prize

By merely playing in the round of 128, Eala is set to pocket her third-biggest purse from a single tournament as all Australian Open first-rounders — men and women — get $150,000 (over P8.9 million).

Eala’s biggest prize money came from the 2025 Miami Open, where she raked in $332,160 for making the semifinals. 

If Eala advances, she will gain $225,000 (over P13.3 million) in the second round, $327,750 (over P19.4 million) in the third round, and $480,000 (over P28.5 million) in the fourth round.

As the Australian Open boasts of its biggest prize pool in history, increasing the amount from $96.5 million in 2025 to $111.5 million, the champion bags a whopping $4,150,000, while the finalist ($2,150,000), semifinalists ($1,250,000), and quarterfinalists ($750,000) also get hefty rewards. – Rappler.com

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