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Fery stuns Dimitrov in five-set thriller to extend historic run

By Nile Post Editor | Monday, July 6, 2026
Fery stuns Dimitrov in five-set thriller to extend historic run
Arthur Fery had never previously gone beyond the second round at a Grand Slam
Fery has been the only British player left in either singles draw since the second round and kept home hopes alive with a dramatic 7-5 3-6 4-6 6-4 7-6 (10-7) victory in front of an enraptured Centre Court.

BBC Sport - Britain's Arthur Fery continued his outstanding Wimbledon run with a thrilling five-set comeback victory over Grigor Dimitrov to reach the quarter-finals and make history.

Fery has been the only British player left in either singles draw since the second round and kept home hopes alive with a dramatic 7-5 3-6 4-6 6-4 7-6 (10-7) victory in front of an enraptured Centre Court.

World number 114 Fery, making his debut on Wimbledon's biggest stage just a short walk from where he grew up, showed remarkable character and resilience throughout to achieve the biggest win of his career.

He secured that by holding his nerve to clinch a deciding 10-point tie-break, having twice fought back from a break of serve down in the fourth set.

The 23-year-old is the first British wildcard to reach a Grand Slam quarter-final and the lowest-ranked player to reach the men's last eight at Wimbledon for 12 years.

At the end of it all, Fery stood on Centre Court with his hands on his hips, shaking his head in sheer disbelief as the crowd rose to their feet.

Swiss great Roger Federer, watching from the Royal Box, was among the thousands inside Wimbledon's centre stage living each point of a captivating conclusion.

Such theatre had appeared unlikely when Dimitrov, having turned the match in his favour following a superb opening set by Fery, twice took the lead in the fourth set.

But Fery - as he has done all week - refused to be put away and leapt into the air in celebration after forcing a decider.

Former world number three Dimitrov was aiming to reach the quarter-finals after his previous bid ended in tears on this exact stage 12 months ago, when he retired injured while leading eventual champion Jannik Sinne by two sets to love.

But Fery never flinched, even as the tension and expectation ramped, becoming just the sixth British player in the Open era to reach the Wimbledon men's singles quarter-finals.

Having never previously gone beyond the second round at a major, Fery will now face Italian ninth seed Flavio Cobolli for a place in the semi-finals on Wednesday.

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