
Britain’s Arthur Fery (L) congratulates Germany’s Alexander Zverev for winning their men’s singles semi-final tennis match on the twelfth day of the 2026 Wimbledon Championships at The All England Lawn Tennis and Croquet Club in Wimbledon, southwest London, on July 10, 2026. (Photo by Adrian DENNIS / AFP)
French Open champion Alexander Zverev ended the remarkable run of British wildcard Arthur Fery with a dominant semifinal victory on Friday to reach his first Wimbledon final.
The second seed will face reigning champion Jannik Sinner for the title on Sunday after seeing off Fery 7-6 (7/0), 6-2, 6-4 on Centre Court.
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“It’s amazing,” said Zverev. “I know that 99.9 percent of the stadium was wanting Arthur to win, but it was still such an incredible atmosphere.”
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READ: Alexander Zverev says first Grand Slam title gives him ‘freedom’
Moving into his first Wimbledon final with a 13th consecutive Grand Slam victory.
Alexander Zverev 👏 pic.twitter.com/Pzqk5IKx4C
— Wimbledon (@Wimbledon) July 10, 2026
Zverev is the first German man to reach the final at the All England Club since Boris Becker in 1995.
He stands one win from ending his nation’s 35-year wait for a men’s Wimbledon champion since Michael Stich lifted the trophy.
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The 29-year-old is also only the third man in the Open era to win a maiden Grand Slam title, which he achieved at Roland Garros last month, and then reach the final of his next major tournament.
He had never even got past the last 16 in nine previous visits to the All England Club.
“This Grand Slam has always been the one I struggled with the most and all of a sudden I’m in the Wimbledon final. I’m incredibly happy,” added Zverev who has only dropped two sets in the tournament so far.
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“But we have one more match to go on Sunday and that is what the focus is on.”
Zverev will face a much tougher examination in his fifth Slam final against Sinner.
READ: Emotions came flooding as Zverev finally wins French Open
He has lost his last nine meetings with world number one Sinner, including last year’s Australian Open final.
“I hope I can play a junior, that would be great,” Zverev joked when asked who he would rather face in the final.
“Whether it’s the defending champion or someone who has won here 48 times like Novak Djokovic, it’s not going to be easy.
“But I have to trust myself and believe I can win and that’s all I can do.”
British hopes dashed
Fery was the first wildcard to reach the Wimbledon men’s semis since Goran Ivanisevic 25 years ago, but his hopes of emulating the popular Croat by going all the way were dashed by a ruthless Zverev.
The home crowd’s new hero will be able to console himself with a rise from 114th to 36th in the ATP rankings, guaranteeing entry into tennis’ biggest events.
The British dream of a first men’s finalist since Andy Murray won his second title in 2016 looked alive when Fery responded immediately to an early break from Zverev.
But the world number three quietened the crowd with a brilliant tie-break, racing through it with a flurry of blistering serves and groundstrokes.
Fery only managed three winners in a one-sided second set as Zverev took total control of the semi-final.
Zverev broke in the fifth game of the third set, before comfortably getting over the finish line on serve to book his spot in a final which Fery will have to watch from home on his 24th birthday.
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“I have to give credit to Arthur, an unbelievable player, he is going to be a senior citizen on our tour,” Zverev said.
“He is going to have great results, this was just the beginning for him.”
View original source — Philippine Daily Inquirer ↗


