Few bonds in the world are formed as quickly as the one between an eager audience and an exciting sportsperson. It is like love at first sight, with the infatuation deep from the very first encounter.
Jasmine Paolini experienced this first hand when she made a mesmerising run to the Wimbledon final in 2024, with the Italian’s bubbly demeanour and clear-cut strokes instantly endearing her to the populace in south west London.
On Monday, in her first match on Centre Court since that bitter-sweet afternoon where she lost to Barbora Krejcikova, Paolini re-established the connection and rode on the rekindled affection to beat Alexandra Eala 6-4, 4-6, 6-3. In the quarterfinals, she will meet Ukraine’s Marta Kostyuk.
Eala, 21, was coming into the match on the back of a stunning triumph over defending champion Iga Swiatek. The Filipino’s fleet-footed tennis and her inspiring back story had made her a fan favourite over the past week.
But the crowd at the All England Club did not quite supplant Paolini with Eala but made space for both, cheering dispassionately for over two hours and twenty minutes.
This spirit was exhibited even by Roger Federer, who had joined fellow greats such as Billie Jean King in the royal box, and it was duly acknowledged by a chuffed Paolini in her post-match speech.
Much of the contest was up and down. Paolini raced to a 4-1 lead, breaking to 3-1 with a fine down-the-line backhand and then holding with a crisp volley.
Eala, 21, was coming into the match on the back of a stunning triumph over defending champion Iga Swiatek. The Filipino’s fleet-footed tennis and her inspiring back story had made her a fan favourite over the past week.
| Photo Credit:
JAIMI JOY
Eala, 21, was coming into the match on the back of a stunning triumph over defending champion Iga Swiatek. The Filipino’s fleet-footed tennis and her inspiring back story had made her a fan favourite over the past week.
| Photo Credit:
JAIMI JOY
But the World No. 17 wobbled in her two subsequent service games, and managed to erase two break-points only because of her spin-heavy second serve which Eala was unable to handle.
A break to 4-5 did eventually arrive for Eala following two forehand errors by Paolini, but she duly handed the initiative back and lost the set 4-6.
The second stanza followed a similar pattern, but with roles reversed. Eala displayed nerves of steel to claw her way back from 0-40 down to hold to 5-3, and she restored parity at one set apiece not long after.
In the decider, there were errors galore and they were mostly from Eala’s racquet. The most consequential of the lot arrived in the eighth game when the World No. 32 dumped a double fault to give Paolini a break-point, and followed it up with a backhand that sailed long.
Paolini, who also reached the Roland-Garros final in 2024, did not miss the invitation to put the tie to rest. The 30-year-old did fall 0-30 behind, but a thunderous ace down the T brought the anxiety down and helped her past the finish line.
“Stepping on these courts is something special,” Paolini said later. “It was a great atmosphere and I feel so lucky.
“I have not played many matches [of late], and after the first set of the first round [which I lost 6-0], I was like okay: can only go better. Point by point, and game by game, I am working my way back. I am getting better,” she added.
Published on Jul 06, 2026












