Index  ›  sport  ›  BBC
sport · BBC ↗

Wimbledon 2026: Arthur Fery accused of 'dishonesty' by Damir Dzumhur

BBC Published Jun 30, 2026 Reviewed Jul 3, 2026 ✓ Reviewed by citations.press editors
Citation-ready fact
Chair umpire Greg Allensworth issued Damir Dzumhur a warning for his protestations about a let call during the second set of his Wimbledon 2026 match against Arthur Fery.
1 warning · Damir Dzumhur
View source ↗
Citation-ready fact
After the incident in the fourth game of the second set, Damir Dzumhur won only three out of 19 games in the remainder of his Wimbledon 2026 match against Arthur Fery.
19 games · Damir Dzumhur3 games · Damir Dzumhur
View source ↗
Citation-ready fact
Arthur Fery, ranked 114th in the world, defeated Damir Dzumhur 3–6, 6–2, 6–2, 6–1 at Wimbledon 2026, becoming the first British man to reach the second round.
3 sets · Damir Dzumhur19 games · Damir Dzumhur3 games · Damir Dzumhur
View source ↗

Britain's Arthur Fery was accused of dishonesty by Bosnian opponent Damir Dzumhur following a row over a let call which proved instrumental in the home player's Wimbledon victory.

Wildcard Fery, 23, fought back from a set and 2-0 down to beat 34-year-old Dzumhur in a 3-6 6-2 6-2 6-1 victory.

Afterwards Fery tried to downplay the incident, saying he feels Dzumhur creates controversy "with everyone".

The match turned on an incident in the fourth game of the second set when Dzumhur thought his serve at 15-30 had caught the tape.

Umpire Greg Allensworth did not call a let, leading to Dzumhur complaining to the official and asking Fery if he could "look into" his eyes and "be honest".

Fery said he did not stop playing the point and Dzumhur stared at the Briton down the court before being broken back for 2-2.

"I wouldn't be able to play knowing that I did something that maybe is not true," Dzumhur said afterwards.

"I felt like he stopped, nobody called let. I didn't ask him to replay but just to be honest, because I would do that. Obviously we are not all the same."

Fery, who is ranked 114th in the world, claimed he expected the Bosnian to try to unsettle him and was unperturbed by "dealing with confrontation".

"To be honest, it probably benefited me in a certain way because I was a bit slow and a bit heavy in my legs," said Fery.

"So that got the spark ignited in me and I just got myself going."

Instead it was Dzumhur whose momentum was disrupted, going on to win only three out of 19 games following the incident.

Fery used earplugs in the changeovers following the incident as Dzumhur continued to sound off at Allensworth.

The players exchanged a terse handshake - and a few more words - after Fery became the first British man to reach the Wimbledon second round.

Fery goes on to play Finnish qualifier Otto Virtanen, who caused the biggest shock so far by beating American fourth seed Ben Shelton.

This article was originally published by BBC ↗. citations.press indexes the source-backed facts above and links to the original. Something wrong? Corrections policy · Report an error