WTA Dubai 02/18 15:00 24 Caroline Wozniacki v Stefanie Voegele Cancelled
WTA Dubai 02/18 15:00 24 Caroline Wozniacki v Samantha Stosur Cancelled
WTA Doha 02/12 13:30 - Karolina Muchova v Caroline Wozniacki Cancelled
Australian Open Women 01/18 04:30 25 [30] Maria Sharapova v Caroline Wozniacki [3] 6-4,4-6,6-3
Australian Open Women 01/16 05:30 24 [77] Johanna Larsson v Caroline Wozniacki [3] 1-6,3-6
Australian Open Women 01/14 08:00 23 [52] Alison Van Uytvanck v Caroline Wozniacki [3] 3-6,4-6
WTA Auckland 01/03 07:55 26 [3] Caroline Wozniacki v Bianca Andreescu [152] 4-6,4-6
WTA Auckland 01/02 01:20 25 [3] Caroline Wozniacki v Laura Siegemund [115] 6-3,6-2
WTA Finals 10/25 11:30 3 [3] Caroline Wozniacki v Elina Svitolina [7] 7-5,5-7,3-6
WTA Finals 10/23 11:30 2 [3] Caroline Wozniacki v Petra Kvitova [5] 7-5,3-6,6-2
WTA Finals 10/21 11:30 1 [2] Caroline Wozniacki v Karolina Pliskova [5] 2-6,4-6
WTA Beijing 10/07 08:30 29 [20] Anastasija Sevastova v Caroline Wozniacki [2] 3-6,3-6
WTA Beijing 10/06 11:30 28 [28] Qiang Wang v Caroline Wozniacki [2] 1-6,3-6
WTA Beijing 10/05 08:50 27 [40] Katerina Siniakova v Caroline Wozniacki [2] 2-6,2-6
WTA Beijing 10/04 08:30 26 [21] Anett Kontaveit v Caroline Wozniacki [2] 5-7,4-6
WTA Beijing 10/03 08:15 25 [36] Petra Martic v Caroline Wozniacki [2] 5-7,3-6
WTA Beijing 10/01 09:40 24 [41] Belinda Bencic v Caroline Wozniacki [2] 2-6,3-6
WTA Wuhan 09/26 11:30 26 [51] Monica Puig v Caroline Wozniacki [2] 7-6,7-5
WTA Wuhan 09/25 03:00 25 [61] Rebecca Petersson v Caroline Wozniacki [2] 4-6,1-6
WTA Tokyo 09/20 09:50 26 [2] Caroline Wozniacki v Camila Giorgi [37] 2-6,6-2,4-6
US Open Women 08/31 01:00 24 [36] Lesia Tsurenko v Caroline Wozniacki [2] 6-4,6-2
US Open Women 08/28 16:00 23 [64] Samantha Stosur v Caroline Wozniacki [2] 3-6,2-6
WTA Cincinnati 08/16 00:20 25 [17] Kiki Bertens v Caroline Wozniacki [2] Retired
WTA Montreal 08/09 19:40 25 [39] Aryna Sabalenka v Caroline Wozniacki [2] 5-7,6-2,7-6
WTA Washington 07/31 23:40 25 Caroline Wozniacki v Anhelina Kalinina Cancelled
Wimbledon Women 07/04 14:20 24 [35] Ekaterina Makarova v Caroline Wozniacki [2] 6-4,1-6,7-5
Wimbledon Women 07/02 13:35 23 [97] Varvara Lepchenko v Caroline Wozniacki [2] 0-6,3-6
WTA Eastbourne 06/30 11:30 29 [2] Caroline Wozniacki v Aryna Sabalenka [45] 7-5,7-6
WTA Eastbourne 06/29 12:15 28 [2] Caroline Wozniacki v Angelique Kerber [11] 2-6,7-6,6-4
WTA Eastbourne 06/28 14:00 27 [2] Caroline Wozniacki v Ashleigh Barty [17] 6-4,6-3

Wikipedia - Caroline Wozniacki

Caroline Wozniacki (Danish: [kʰɑʁoˈliːnə vʌsniˈɑkʰi]; born 11 July 1990) is a Danish professional tennis player. She was ranked world No. 1 in singles for a total of 71 weeks, including at the end of 2010 and 2011. She achieved the top ranking for the first time on 11 October 2010, becoming the 20th player in the Open Era and the first from a Scandinavian country to hold the top position. In 2018, she became the first Dane to win a major singles title, at the Australian Open.

Known for her footwork and defensive abilities, Wozniacki won 30 WTA Tour singles titles (including six in both 2010 and 2011, the most in a year by a WTA player from 2008–2011) and two doubles titles. A junior major champion, she won the 2006 Wimbledon girls' singles title over Magdaléna Rybáriková and was voted the WTA Newcomer of the Year in 2008. Before her victory at the 2018 Australian Open over Simona Halep, she had reached two major finals at the US Open, falling to Kim Clijsters in 2009 and to Serena Williams in 2014. Wozniacki also won the season-ending WTA Finals in 2017, beating Venus Williams, after previously finishing runner-up to Clijsters at the event in 2010. Other career highlights include winning three Premier Mandatory and three Premier 5 titles, reaching four major semifinals (the 2011 Australian Open and the 2010, 2011 and 2016 US Opens), three major quarterfinals (the 2012 Australian Open and the 2010 and 2017 French Opens), and the quarterfinals at the 2012 London Olympics. Wozniacki retired on 24 January 2020, following a third-round loss at the Australian Open. In 2022, she became a commentator for Tennis Channel and ESPN before she announced in June 2023 a comeback at the Canadian Open and the US Open in August, targeting the 2024 Olympic Games.