Caroline Wozniacki claimed the biggest title of her career after staving off a ferocious Venus Williams fightback to win the WTA Finals title 6-4, 6-4 at a captivated Singapore Indoor Stadium on Sunday.

The former world No1 entered the contest having lost against Williams seven times in seven matches but the resilient Dane served and retrieved brilliantly and emerged with a deserved victory after 89 minutes. Wozniacki was faultless for an hour as she raced to a one-set and 5-0 lead but Williams reeled off four games in a row before the player from Denmark could finally lift the title at the eight-woman event in her fifth appearance.

“It was all going well at 5-0 in the second set, then she went for her shots and I was just so happy to get it done in the end,” said Wozniacki, who will rise three places to third in the world rankings after the win, said in a courtside interview. “Well, eight is my lucky number and I figured if I was ever going to beat her it would be today ... and I just went out there and did my best.”

The first three games were dominated by the server until the 27-year-old Wozniacki started to find the corners with her powerful backhand and fashioned the first break of the match with back-to-back winners off both flanks.

Williams was trying to get to the net at every opportunity and came forward to good effect after dropping her serve. A vicious cross-court backhand enabled the American to break back immediately on her way to levelling the score at 3-3.

She continued to be the aggressor but Wozniacki held on in the face of some brutal hitting and somehow forged her second break of the set with some exquisite deep hitting to move within a game of taking the opener.

Williams came roaring back once more, leaving Wozniacki looking on as a helpless spectator, with a barrage of winners to get the high-class contest back on serve.

After working so hard to stay in touch, Williams would have been deeply frustrated to hand her opponent the set when Wozniacki did not have to work to seize the third break in a row, the wayward American sending forehands wide, long and into the net.

Wozniacki had seized the momentum with her variation, depth of shot and complete lack of errors preventing Williams from grabbing any sort of foothold in the contest and then flying into a 5-0 lead in 11 second-set minutes.

Needing to hold to stay in the contest, Williams belatedly found her rhythm to get on the scoreboard in the second set and then broke with some solid play against an increasingly anxious Wozniacki. Williams suddenly appeared relaxed and free, holding easily to heap more pressure on the Dane before breaking again to get it back to 5-4.

The crowd wanted more but Wozniacki was not ready to oblige, breaking again and sealing victory on her second match point with a backhand winner down the line, and tossing her racket in the air as she celebrated a stunning triumph.

Wozniacki’s victory is her second of the season in eight finals after she successfully defended her Pan Pacific Open title in Tokyo last month.