Good Morning Britain hosts Susanna Reid and Ed Balls discussed the latest news from Wimbledon07:48, 07 Jul 2026Susanna Reid was apologetic on Good Morning Britain.‌The 55-year-old star returned to the ITV studios on Tuesday (July 7) to deliver the latest headlines from across the UK and around the world, alongside her co-host Ed Balls.‌Later in the show, Ranvir Singh shared an exciting update from Wimbledon, after Arthur Fery became the first British wildcard to make it through to the quarter finals after a five-set thriller against Grigor Dimitrov.‌On today's GMB, Ranvir said: "The British tennis player Arthur Fery has made it into the Wimbledon quarter finals after he won a wonderful five-set match on Centre Court against Bulgarian Grigor Dimitrov."Susanna and Ed soon discussed the impressive result with regular commentators Kwasi Kwarteng and the Mirror's Kevin Maguire, shortly before Susanna issued an apology to the British hopeful.‌She said: "Let's celebrate an incredible sporting achievement. British wildcard Arthur Fery emerging victorious following an enthralling five-set thriller yesterday with Grigor Dimitrov to make it to the Wimbledon quarter finals."He is 23 years old and is now carrying the British hopes in the tournament. So, the result on Centre Court in this showdown yesterday, he came down from two sets to one to win a final set tiebreak. So, it went 5-7, 6-3, 6-4, 4-6, and then 6-7."Susanna went on: "Congratulations Arthur Fery. And he's playing in pretty hot, humid conditions," before issuing an apology: "And I had never heard of him, sorry Arthur!"‌Kevin added: "I know, because he's so low ranked. This is the fantastic sporting story. It's somebody [with] little chance achieving incredible success, while [Donald] Trump and the [World Cup] red card is the very worst of sport."Susanna revealed that Arthur was lauded by former British star Tim Henman, who said: "An incredible performance. He's shaking his head in disbelief about what just happened."‌Speaking after his win on Centre Court, Arthur said: "I've no words right now. It's incredibly tough to put words to what I've just felt on a tennis court in front of all you guys. The support was phenomenal."First time on this court, five sets against an absolute legend of the game. I grew up five minutes from here, I grew up coming to watch matches on this court."Turning to Roger Federer, who was watching on from the Royal Box, Arthur added: "We've got probably the greatest of all time watching from the front row of the Royal Box. Now playing here in front of all you guys and winning, it's unbelievable."Article continues belowIt was the first time in grand slam history that two wild cards had met so late in a tournament, after Dimitrov dropped to 146 in the rankings following a cruel injury at the same stage of Wimbledon last year.Good Morning Britain airs weekdays on ITV1 and ITVX at 6am