Stakusic vs. Mandlik: Battle for the W100 Crown in Edmond, OK
At 12:00 PM CDT today, the Edmond Center Court will host the culminating match of the 2025 ITF World Tennis Tour Edmond Open W100: #3 seed Marina Stakusic of Canada faces Elizabeth “Elli” Mandlik of the United States. Reaching the finals of a W100 event is a tremendous accomplishment. These players have navigated a week of high-level opposition and pressure to stake their claim for the title, ranking points, and confidence. Here is a closer look at their respective journeys and backstories heading into this deciding showdown.
Marina Stakusic: Canada’s rising prospect
Early life and rise
Marina Stakusic (often seen in some sources as “Marina,” though some references use “Marina / Marina” variation) was born on November 27, 2004, in Mississauga, Ontario, Canada. She began playing tennis at age Her father is Montenegrin-born (emigrating to Canada in his mid-20s) and her mother is Canadian-born to Serbian immigrant parents; her brother Marko is also a professional player.
As a junior, she achieved a combined ranking as high as No. 31. Over recent seasons she has been steadily pushing upward through the ITF circuit and on the fringes of the WTA Tour.
Career highlights to date
Stakusic’s career-high WTA singles ranking is No. 114 (reached February 24, 2025). She also holds a doubles high of 448 (August 2023) though her focus has clearly been on singles. In 2023, she contributed to Canada’s Billie Jean King Cup victory (in the final, helping defeat Martina Trevisan in a tie) as a team member.
On the WTA Tour level, she has already made waves: in Guadalajara 2024, she upset Jelena Ostapenko in a dramatic match, saving several match points and winning the final nine points to reach her first WTA quarterfinal. She also captured a WTA Challenger (125-level) title in Tampico in late 2024.
The challenge of a W100 final
For Stakusic, being seeded third here means expectations are high, as is the pressure. A W100 is among the more prestigious ITF events, just one tier below the WTA 125 tournaments, and carries big ranking points. To reach the final, she would have had to defeat a mix of seasoned ITF stalwarts and younger up-and-comers, likely under varied conditions. The alteration in match intensity, the cumulative fatigue of several tight matches, and the mental demand of sustaining focus are all elevated at this level. For a 20-year-old rising star, this final is both an opportunity and a test.
Elizabeth Mandlik: forging her own legacy
Tennis lineage and early path
Elizabeth Hana Mandlik was born May 19, 2001, in Boca Raton, Florida. She is the daughter of Grand Slam champion Hana Mandlíková and the granddaughter of Olympic sprinter Vilém Mandlík. Growing up in such a tennis-oriented family brings both opportunities and expectations.
Mandlik began playing tennis at age 7, under guidance that aimed to balance development with longevity, her mother reportedly delayed pushing her too early to avoid burnout.
Competitive resume and milestones
Mandlik’s highest singles ranking to date is No. 97 (achieved June 19, 2023), while her best doubles ranking is No. 187 (November 2022). She has won eight singles titles and three doubles titles on the ITF circuit.
Her journey into the WTA Tour spotlight includes a breakthrough in 2022 at the Silicon Valley Classic, when qualifying into the main draw, she defeated Alison Riske-Amritraj before pushing world No. 4 Paula Badosa to a third-set tiebreak. That performance earned her a surge in ranking and attention. She also successfully completed the US Open Wildcard Challenge to gain entry into the US Open, where she won her first-round match versus Tamara Zidanšek and fell in the second round to eventual finalist Ons Jabeur.
In 2023 she reached her first WTA 125 final (Catalonia Open) but was edged out in a tight three-set match by Sorana Cîrstea. More broadly, she has made steady inroads through the ITF ranks, often navigating qualifying rounds and seizing momentum when opportunities arise.
Unlike many players with bit early success, Mandlik carries the additional narrative of building her own identity beyond her mother’s legacy. While the name opens doors, it also brings scrutiny, a fact she has acknowledged in interviews.
Why a W100 final matters
A W100 final is a proving ground for players like Mandlik who are striving to convert ITF dominance and occasional WTA breakthroughs into sustained presence at higher levels. To reach the final, she has had to overcome multiple opponents who are often battle-hardened in $25k, $60k, $80k, and $100k events. Each match demands mental toughness, tactical adjustments, and recovery skills across successive days. For Mandlik especially, this is also a statement: she is capable of challenging top seeds and vying for the biggest ITF titles.
Preview: What today’s final might bring
Today’s Singles Finals pits a rising young star (Stakusic) bursting with momentum and upset potential against a more experienced, gritty competitor (Mandlik) familiar with adversity and expectations. Stakusic will bring fearlessness and big hitting from the baseline, while Mandlik’s steadiness and match awareness could be her assets under pressure. Fatigue, nerves, and small tactical shifts (serve placement, second-serve resilience, break-point conversion) will all loom large.
For both players, the stakes are high: the winner will take not only the trophy and prize money, but valuable ranking points that could propel them deeper into WTA-level events. Even for the runner-up, making the final of a W100 is a signal that she belongs among the upper tier of the ITF circuit and is knocking on the door of consistent WTA contention.
As the noon hour approaches at Edmond Center Court, tennis fans can expect a spirited, high-quality battle, one that reflects the depth, grit, and potential of these two young women striving for prominence on the international stage.









