A SETTLEMENT has been reached in tennis starlet Eugenie Bouchard’s slip-and-fall lawsuit against the managers of the US Open.

The dollar figure to be paid to Bouchard by the United States Tennis Association was not disclosed.

But a day prior, Bouchard’s lawyer had predicted that a jury award would net his client millions of dollars.

The settlement was struck on Friday afternoon (Saturday) at Brooklyn federal court just as jurors were about to hear testimony from Bouchard regarding the monetary damages she suffered after slipping backwards on a tile floor that was slick with cleaning chemicals at the 2015 tournament.

The resulting concussion caused her to drop out of that year’s tournament.

The settlement spares the one-time No.5 player from the potentially embarrassing testimony about how her tennis career has tanked post-concussion.

It comes after both sides made opening statements.

Bouchard’s lawyer, Benedict Morelli, told jurors that tennis players aren’t supposed to suffer concussions and traumatic brain injuries, and that the pro took a financial hit afterwards.

“She gave up a lot of money at that point,” Morelli said Friday of Bouchard, who cut short her performance at that year’s tournament due to her brain injury.

Bouchard has since then slid steadily in the standings; she is currently ranked 116th.

“She returned to tennis, but tennis didn’t return to her,” Morelli said.

But a lawyer for the USTA countered that Bouchard’s standings were already slipping, and that she’s still swimming in endorsement money due to her new career as an internet darling.

Bouchard’s 1.6 million Instagram followers are treated to a steady stream of her workout selfies and SI Swimsuit Edition snaps.

Her more recent notoriety as a fitness model — if not her tennis skills — has won her lucrative endorsement deals with Coke, Nike and Rolex.

Friday’s settlement comes a day after the same jury found the USTA was 75 per cent liable Bouchard slipping on the slippery tile floor.