Tuesday 7 July 2026

Tim Henman shuts down Clare Balding in awkward Wimbledon exchange

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Jack Otway

By Jack Otway


Published: 07/07/2026

- 11:27

The Briton was keen to move on after one of the most painful defeats of his career was mentioned

Clare Balding was swiftly cut off by Tim Henman during an awkward moment on the BBC's Wimbledon coverage after she brought up one of the most painful defeats of his playing career.

The exchange came as Balding, Henman and Jamie Murray reflected on Arthur Fery's remarkable run to the Wimbledon quarter-finals following the British wildcard's dramatic victory over Grigor Dimitrov.


Fery, ranked world No 114, produced one of the biggest shocks of the Championships by edging past the Bulgarian in a thrilling deciding-set tie-break, earning himself a last-eight meeting with ninth seed Flavio Caballo on Wednesday.

During the discussion, Balding pointed out that Fery's 24th birthday falls on Sunday, the day of the men's singles final.

"It's his birthday on Sunday, Tim! Men's finals day," she said.

Murray responded enthusiastically: "It's written in the stars."

Balding then highlighted another remarkable coincidence, noting that 25 years earlier, before Fery was born, wildcard Goran Ivanisevic had famously gone on to lift the Wimbledon title.

"And 25 years ago today, so before he was born, the only wildcard to win Wimbledon, Goran Ivanisevic, did that. I mean..." she said.

Clare Balding was swiftly cut off by Tim Henman during an awkward moment on the BBC's Wimbledon coverage after she brought up one of the most painful defeats of his playing career

Clare Balding was swiftly cut off by Tim Henman during an awkward moment on the BBC's Wimbledon coverage after she brought up one of the most painful defeats of his playing career

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BBC

Before Balding could continue, Henman quickly interrupted.

"This is a much better story, let's not go back to 2001!" he replied.

The former British No 1 was referring to one of the most painful moments of his career.

Henman was beaten by Ivanisevic in an epic five-set semi-final before the Croatian went on to defeat Patrick Rafter and become the first wildcard champion in Wimbledon history.

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The defeat represented Henman's third loss in a Wimbledon semi-final, with the former world No 4 ultimately falling at the final-four stage on four separate occasions without ever reaching the championship match.

Recognising Henman's reluctance to revisit those memories, Balding immediately moved the conversation on.

"OK, let's just keep looking forward, you're right," she responded.

Balding is part of the BBC's presenting team for this year's Championships alongside a host of former players and broadcasters.

Meanwhile, fellow BBC stalwart Andrew Castle recently revealed this year's tournament will be his final one as the corporation's lead commentator after more than two decades covering Wimbledon.

The former British tennis player admitted he was disappointed by the decision but accepted that his time in the role had come to an end.

Tim Henman pictured after losing to Goran Ivanisevic back in 2001

Tim Henman pictured after losing to Goran Ivanisevic back in 2001

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GETTY

Speaking to The Telegraph, Castle said: "Am I upset? Yeah, I was upset, and I will stay that way this year, knowing it's my last. But all good things come to an end."

The 62-year-old also revealed he had hoped to remain in the position until 2027, when Wimbledon celebrates its 150th anniversary.

"It would have been my 25th year. But who's bleating?" he said.

Reflecting on the BBC's decision to replace him as lead commentator for future men's finals, Castle added: "I was told in person, in a very respectful way, and I was very grateful for that – because knowing what I know about TV, you can be walking down the street one moment and the next you've been nobbled."