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What Arthur Fery’s projected ranking is after dream run at Wimbledon and how it could impact him at the US Open

Photo by Jan Kruger/Getty Images
Photo by Jan Kruger/Getty Images
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Arthur Fery will look to continue his incredible run at the 2026 Wimbledon Championships when he takes on Grigor Dimitrov today.

Fery is the last British player standing in singles at the All England Club, with all of the other home hopes either withdrawing before the tournament or bowing out.

The 23-year-old received a wildcard for Wimbledon and has impressed so far, coming through three testing bouts against Damir Dzumhur, Otto Virtanen and Zizou Bergs.

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He will face his biggest test of the campaign against Dimitrov, and will take to Centre Court for the first time versus the Bulgarian.

Regardless of whether he wins or loses, Fery has already made a huge impact on his career at Wimbledon.

Arthur Fery celebrates at Wimbledon.
Photo by Tim Clayton/Getty Images

Where Arthur Fery is currently placed in the live rankings

Fery entered Wimbledon as the world number 114, a career-high ranking he achieved after a strong start to the grass swing.

Following a trip to the semifinals of a Challenger event in Birmingham, he made the quarterfinals at Queen’s and the round of 16 at the Eastbourne Open.

Having lost in the second round of Wimbledon last year, Fery reaching the fourth round this season has seen him pick up 150 ATP points so far.

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Photo by Ibrahim Ezzat/NurPhoto via Getty Images

In the live rankings, he has jumped up 23 places to world number 91, and that could, of course, go higher should he advance past Dimitrov.

Fery’s run at Wimbledon means he will now be able to qualify for the US Open, as he will be inside the top 104 players in the world.

To play in the main draw of a Grand Slam, players must either be ranked in the top 104 at the cut-off date, go through qualifying, or receive a wildcard.

Arthur Fery celebrates a point at Wimbledon.
Photo by Jan Kruger/Getty Images

How much money Arthur Fery has made at Wimbledon so far

Prior to Wimbledon, Fery had accumulated a total of $868,053 in prize money over his career across both singles and doubles.

Just by reaching the fourth round at Wimbledon, Fery has already earned himself nearly half of that sum; $396,100.

If he beats former world number three Dimitrov, that total will increase to $633,750.

Semifinalists in men’s and women’s singles at Wimbledon receive $1.19 million, while the runner-up gets $2.38 million and the champion earns $4.75 million.