In the middle of a quiet February evening in 2026, the tennis world — and millions of hearts around the globe — stopped scrolling for a moment that felt straight out of a movie.
Filipino tennis star Alexandra Eala, currently ranked inside the WTA top 50 and fresh off a breakthrough season, was spotted at a small, candlelit restaurant tucked away in the hills of Tuscany, Italy. What began as a private romantic dinner with her longtime boyfriend quickly turned into one of the most viral and heartwarming moments of the year.

Around 9:40 p.m. local time, the sky above the terrace suddenly came alive.
Dozens of synchronized drones rose silently from the nearby vineyards, forming perfect patterns against the starry backdrop. First came glowing hearts, then a silhouette of a tennis racket crossed with a ring. Then, letter by letter, the drones spelled out three simple words in brilliant white light:
“Eala, I love you.”
The restaurant fell silent. Diners put down their forks. Phones came out. Alexandra — wearing a simple cream sweater and jeans, hair loose after a day of training — looked up in disbelief. Her boyfriend, who had been quietly nervous all evening, stood up.
A single drone detached from the formation and slowly descended toward their table, hovering just above eye level. Attached to it was a small velvet box.
When the box opened, a classic solitaire diamond ring sparkled under the drone’s spotlight.
Alexandra’s hands flew to her mouth. Tears welled up instantly. The boyfriend — whose identity has been kept private at the couple’s request but is known among close friends as a longtime supporter from her junior days — dropped to one knee and spoke five soft words that echoed through the stunned silence:
“Will you marry me, Alexandra?”
She nodded before he even finished the question.
“Yes… yes… yes!”

The drones burst into a shower of soft golden sparks that rained gently over the table like confetti. Alexandra pulled him into a tearful embrace while the small group of diners — and the staff who had been let in on the secret — erupted into applause and cheers. Someone started filming from the first second; within minutes the clip was everywhere.
By morning, the video had surpassed 87 million views across platforms. #EalaEngaged and #AlexandraProposal became the top global trends. Filipino fans flooded social media with crying emojis, national flags, and proud captions: “Our princess said YES! 🇵🇭💍” “From public courts in Manila to a proposal under the Tuscan stars — this is OUR story!”
International tennis stars reacted instantly. Rafael Nadal posted a heart emoji and the words “Felicidades, Alexandra. Amor verdadero.” Coco Gauff wrote: “Crying real tears right now. This is beautiful.” Iga Świątek shared the clip with a simple “Wow… ❤️”. Even Novak Djokovic, usually reserved on personal matters, commented: “Beautiful moment. Wishing you both a lifetime of happiness.”
But the proposal wasn’t just romantic — it carried deep personal meaning.
Alexandra has spoken openly in interviews about the sacrifices her family made so she could chase tennis: her father driving hours to tournaments, her mother working extra jobs, the years of uncertainty when money was tight. Her boyfriend — who has been by her side since her junior breakthrough — proposed in Italy, the country where she won her first big junior title and where she feels a special connection to the clay-court culture that shaped her game.
The choice of drones instead of a traditional setting was deliberate. Alexandra has always said she wants to inspire young girls in the Philippines to dream big without losing their roots. The sky-written message and the drone-delivered ring symbolized exactly that: a love story that soared high but stayed grounded in sincerity.
Philippine President Ferdinand Marcos Jr. personally sent a congratulatory message: “Alexandra Eala continues to make the nation proud — on the court and in life. Congratulations to her and her fiancé on this beautiful chapter.”
The tennis calendar pauses for no one, but Alexandra’s team confirmed she will take a short break after the current hard-court swing before returning for the clay season. Her next scheduled event is the Miami Open in late March.
For now, though, the world isn’t talking about rankings or draws.
They’re talking about love.
About a young woman who reached the top 50 in the toughest sport in the world, who turned down massive sponsorships to protect her independence, and who — when the moment came — said yes to forever in the most magical way possible.
In an age of curated perfection and sponsored moments, Alexandra Eala gave the internet something rare: real, raw, unfiltered joy.
And millions of fans — especially young girls holding cracked racquets on public courts in Manila, Cebu, Davao — watched that drone descend with a ring box and thought the same thing:
If she can do it, maybe I can too.