Roger Federer has not won a Grand Slam title this year but the 17-time Grand Slam champion topped Forbes magazine’s list of the 10 top tennis moneymakers announced Monday. The Swiss star made $56.2 million (42.6 million euros) from July of last year through this past June, with endorsement deals from such firms as Rolex and Nike bringing the lion’s share of that total - more than $40 million (30 million euros). At age 33, Federer owns three titles in 2014 and was a Wimbledon runner-up, dropping the five set final to top-ranked Novak Djokovic. [caption id=“attachment_1682117” align=“alignleft” width=“380”]
Reuters[/caption] Five men and five women made this year’s list. Spaniard Rafael Nadal, who won his ninth French Open crown this past June, ranked second on the list at $44.5 million but was on the sidelines as the US Open began in New York because of a wrist injury. Nadal had $30 million in sponsor money. Serbia’s Djokovic was third with $33.1 million (25 million euros) that included $12.1 million (9.1 million euros) in prize money. Russian beauty Maria Sharapova was fourth overall but topped the women on the list with $24.4 million, $22 million of it from endorsements. China’s Li Na, who won her second Grand Slam title in January at the Australian Open, was fifth on $23.6 million with $18 million in endorsement income. She is absent from the US Open with a knee injury. World number one Serena Williams ranked sixth on the money list with $22 million, half from prize money. Britain’s Andy Murray, whose earnings jumped more than $4 million after he became the first British man to win the Wimbledon crown since 1936 last year, ranked seventh on $19.1 million, with $15 million of that from endorsements. With his adidas contract expiring this year, a lucrative new deal with adidas or Nike could raise his total next year no matter how he fares at this year’s US Open. Victoria Azarenka was eighth at $11.1 million (8.4 million euros), with $7.5 million (5.6 million euros) from endorsements, with Japan’s Kei Nishikori ninth on $11 million 8.3 million euros) that included $9 million (6.8 million euros) in sponsorship deals and Denmark’s Caroline Wozniacki 10th on $10.8 million (8.1 million euros), $9.5 million (7.2 million euros)of that from endorsements. AFP
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