Fresh off a breakthrough week in Auckland, Alex Eala is back on court Wednesday (Jan. 14) at the Kooyong Classic in Melbourne, lining up a quick-turnaround rematch with Croatiaโs Donna Vekiฤโthe same opponent she beat in the ASB Classic opening round. This is not a rankings play; itโs a calibration match before the Australian Open, and Eala is treating it like exactly that: another live-fire rep against a veteran she already tagged once.
The numbers behind the headline are loud. Eala climbed to a new career-high of World No. 49 in the latest WTA rankingsโtop 50 territoryโafter her semifinal run in New Zealand. That run ended in a knife-edge three-set loss to Chinaโs Xinyu Wang where Wang saved a match point before escaping, a reminder that Eala isnโt โbuilding potentialโ anymoreโsheโs already pushing contenders to the brink.
Kooyong, however, wonโt pad the resume on paper: itโs an exhibition, meaning no WTA or ATP ranking points are at stake. But exhibitions still tell the truth about formโtiming, patterns, shot toleranceโespecially against a familiar opponent like Vekiฤ, a proven tour presence and, per recent coverage, an Olympic silver medalist. The match functions as Ealaโs final tune-up lane before the Australian Open schedule later this month.
The scorecard read is simple: momentum is real, but so is the next test. Eala enters Kooyong with top-50 validation, a recent win over Vekiฤ, and the sting of being one point from an Auckland finalโingredients that usually separate โgood storiesโ from โdangerous drawsโ in Melbourne. Wednesday is the re-check: can she replicate the result, and can she sharpen the margins that decide three-set matches at Slam level?
Image from ASB Classic IG

