Alexandra Eala makes tennis history for Philippines by reaching Eastbourne final

Philippines’ Alexandra Eala celebrates after beating France’s Varvara Gracheva in their women’s singles semifinal of the Lexus Eastbourne International on June 27, 2025. (AFP)
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Updated 28 June 2025
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Alexandra Eala makes tennis history for Philippines by reaching Eastbourne final

  • In Saturday’s final she will face 19-year-old Australian Maya Joint
  • It will be the youngest Eastbourne final since 1981

EASTBOURNE, England: Alexandra Eala became the first Filipino to reach a WTA Tour final as she beat fellow qualifier Varvara Gracheva 7-5 2-6 6-3 at the Eastbourne Open on Friday, while lucky loser Jenson Brooksby will meet holder Taylor Fritz in the men’s final.

Left-hander Eala, ranked 74th in the world, edged a tight first set before losing five games in a row in the second as the match appeared to be slipping away.

But the 20-year-old regrouped in the decider and survived a tough seventh game before breaking her French opponent’s serve to lead 5-3. She then enjoyed a love service game to seal victory.

In Saturday’s final she will face 19-year-old Australian Maya Joint who beat Anastasia Pavlyuchenkova 7-5 6-3.

It will be the youngest Eastbourne final since 1981 when Tracy Austin faced fellow American Andrea Jaeger.

“I’m super happy because that was a tough match and there were some really tough moments,” an emotional Eala, who is based in Mallorca and trains at the Rafa Nadal Academy, said on court.

“It was tough physically and mentally because she is a tough player and also came from qualifying.”

Eala’s run will not have gone unnoticed by Wimbledon champion Barbora Krejcikova, who has been drawn to play her in the first round at the All England Club next week.

Krejcikova reached the quarter-finals at Eastbourne but withdrew with a thigh injury on Thursday.

Joint continued her impressive run as she reached her first WTA final on grass, coming from 5-3 behind in the opening set against Pavlyuchenkova to take control.

“I’m very excited,” the 51st-ranked Joint said on court. “I’ve learned to love playing on grass this week.”

Three-times champion Fritz overcame Spanish sixth seed Alejandro Davidovich Fokina 6-3 3-6 6-1 and will now face fellow-American Brooksby after the lucky loser beat French fourth seed Ugo Humbert.

Fritz broke the Spaniard’s first service game as he comfortably won the first set, and while Davidovich Fokina fought back to force a decider, the American broke twice in the last set to reach the final for the fourth time.

Brooksby won his first ATP title in April at the US Men’s Clay Court Championship, where he began as a wildcard in the qualifying rounds and his 6-7(7) 6-4 6-4 win over Humbert sees the American make it to another final.

“I think it’s a lot less pressure when you don’t expect to be in the main draw and get the opportunity,” Brooksby said.

“You just want to make the most of it.”

Humbert came from 5-3 down to win the opening set on a tiebreak, before Brooksby bounced back despite the Frenchman’s battling spirit.

The American took a 3-0 lead in the next two sets and Humbert drew level on both occasions, but Brooksby clinched both sets with a break of serve.


Nigeria’s Chukwueze calls for AFCON to get same respect as World Cup

Updated 25 December 2025
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Nigeria’s Chukwueze calls for AFCON to get same respect as World Cup

  • “Everybody wants to play in AFCON. It’s one of the best competitions in the world,” Chukwueze told On Sports TV

Nigeria forward Samuel Chukwueze believes the Africa Cup of Nations should be given the same level of ​respect as the World Cup and the European Championship following controversy over the timing of the tournament in Morocco.
Initially scheduled to take place in the summer, this year’s AFCON was scheduled for December 21-January 18, depriving ‌leading European clubs ‌of key players ‌participating ⁠in ​it ‌at a crucial stage of the domestic season. “Everybody wants to play in AFCON. It’s one of the best competitions in the world,” Chukwueze told On Sports TV. “You have to respect the AFCON ⁠the same way you respect the European Championship ‌or World Cup.”
The Fulham winger ‍will miss six ‍games for his club if Nigeria ‍reach the round of 16.
“We understand they scheduled it at the wrong time of the year, but when it’s important, ​if you get recalled you have to go,” he said. “You don’t have ⁠any choice, your club can’t stop you and no one should say anything bad about the AFCON. Yes, they put it at the wrong time, but saying it’s not a good competition or a great competition is unacceptable.”
Chukwueze helped Nigeria secure an opening 2-1 win over Tanzania in Group C ‌ahead of their second game against Tunisia on Saturday.