Wednesday, July 08, 2026

Arthur Fery interrupted by boos during Wimbledon interview after reaching semi-finals

July 8, 2026
1 min read
Arthur Fery interrupted by boos during Wimbledon interview after reaching semi-finals

Arthur Fery reaches Wimbledon semi-finals

British wildcard Arthur Fery has secured his place in the Wimbledon semi-finals after a commanding straight-sets triumph over world number nine Flavio Cobolli this afternoon, reports BritPanorama.

The 23-year-old French-born Brit dispatched the Italian ninth seed 6-4, 7-6, 6-0 on Centre Court, continuing his extraordinary run at SW19.

Fery joins an elite group as only the fourth British player to reach the last four at the Championships since the turn of the millennium, following in the footsteps of Tim Henman, two-time champion Andy Murray and Cameron Norrie. He becomes just the second wildcard to achieve this feat, after 2001 champion Goran Ivanisevic.

The Centre Court faithful made their feelings abundantly clear when Fery was informed during his post-match interview that Alexander Zverev awaits him on Friday. Loud boos rang out across the famous arena at the mention of the German’s name, signalling that the recent French Open champion can expect a decidedly partisan atmosphere when the pair meet.

Fery responded to the crowd’s vocal disapproval with nothing more than a knowing smile, declining to comment as the interview concluded. The reaction left little doubt that British tennis fans will be firmly behind their man when he faces Zverev in what will be a first Wimbledon semi-final for both players.

Speaking on court after his remarkable victory, Fery expressed his astonishment at the achievement. “It seems to get better and better every match. No, I just can’t believe it. It’s incredible playing on Centre Court for the second time, second win, I can’t believe it,” he said.

The Brit revealed that an earlier encounter with Cobolli had bolstered his self-belief. “I played Flavio earlier this year in Australia and I beat him. That was a boost of confidence,” he explained, adding that despite pre-match nerves, he persevered until the end. Fery admitted the closing moments overwhelmed him. “That last game I felt emotions that I hadn’t experienced before in my life,” he confessed.

Zverev, who defeated Taylor Fritz in straight sets on Court One, took the crowd’s anticipated allegiance in good spirits. “It’s okay you guys can all be for Fery, it’s totally fine, I understand it. I don’t have a problem with it!” the German told spectators, before offering a playful observation: “For him it’s a Fery-tale story, for Arthur Fery, see what I did there?!”

Fery entered the Championships ranked 114th in the world but now stands poised to climb towards the top 50 following victories over Damian Dzumhur, Otto Virtanen, Zizou Bergs, former semi-finalist Grigor Dimitrov and now Cobolli. Sunday’s final also coincides with Fery’s 24th birthday.

As the excitement builds ahead of Fery’s showdown with Zverev, it highlights how swiftly narratives can shift in tennis—where underdogs can rise to the occasion and household names face the looming spectre of upset.

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published.

Don't Miss

Arthur Fery secures £900,000 payday after remarkable Wimbledon quarter-final victory

Arthur Fery secures £900,000 payday after remarkable Wimbledon quarter-final victory

Arthur Fery secures £900,000 after Wimbledon quarter-final victory Arthur Fery has secured
Lewis Moody makes special appearance at Wimbledon following MND diagnosis

Lewis Moody makes special appearance at Wimbledon following MND diagnosis

Lewis Moody makes special appearance at Wimbledon England rugby icon Lewis Moody