
Before the Australian Open started, Simona Halep had earned a huge $20,912,291 in her tennis career.
The Romanian turned pro in 2006 which means she has averaged close to $2million a year playing professional tennis.
If Halep beats Caroline Wozniacki in the Australian Open final she will bank the biggest cheque of her career – $3.29million. The runner-up, meanwhile, will take $1.65m.
Halep is ranked 15th on the all-time career prize money leaders in women’s tennis.
The top prize money leaders as of January 15 (US dollars)
WILLIAMS, SERENA, 84,463,131
WILLIAMS, VENUS, 39,911,734
SHARAPOVA, MARIA, 37,073,139
AZARENKA, VICTORIA, 28,431,189
RADWANSKA, AGNIESZKA, 27,226,155
WOZNIACKI, CAROLINE, 26,856,094
HINGIS, MARTINA, 24,749,074
CLIJSTERS, KIM, 24,442,340
KUZNETSOVA, SVETLANA, 24,200,700
KVITOVA, PETRA, 24,052,063
DAVENPORT, LINDSAY, 22,166,338
GRAF, STEFFI, 21,895,277
NAVRATILOVA, MARTINA, 21,626,089
KERBER, ANGELIQUE, 21,607,604
SIMONA HALEP, 20,912,291

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Simona Halep and Caroline Wozniacki will compete for high stakes in Saturday’s Australian Open final, having each needed to save match points to prevent a premature exit at Melbourne Park.
The winner at Rod Laver Arena is not only guaranteed a long-awaited maiden grand slam title but also the world number one ranking in the game of thrones that women’s tennis has become in Serena Williams’s absence.
The final will be the first between two non-slam winners in 38 years, since Hana Mandlikova beat home favourite Wendy Turnbull in 1980.
But in a fortnight where the seeds have been scattered to the wind, Halep and Wozniacki may both feel fortunate to still be in the hunt.
In arguably the clash of the tournament, top seed Halep had to save three match points and battle back from a set down in a marathon thriller against American Lauren Davis in the third round.
Still recovering from an ankle injury, the Romanian needed to save two further match points in another three-set classic against 2016 champion Angelique Kerber in the semi-finals.
Second seed Wozniacki also had to save two match points and claw back from 5-1 down in her early round match against Croatia’s Jana Fett.
Little wonder Denmark’s most accomplished tennis player described herself as feeling like she was playing with “house money” at Melbourne Park.