SJM Trip Report: 2026 WNT UK Open a Big Hit

sjm

Older and Wiser
Silver Member
I just returned from Brentwood, Essex, England where I took in all six days of the WNT UK Open. It was fantastic.

The Setup of the Tournament
I am sure that a few have whined loudly about the lack of air conditioning at the Brentwood Centre, but only day one had very hot weather and I was fairly comfortable for the last five days. I’d certainly go back.

The real story was the pool. The field was rock solid. The room was set up the way I like it, with groups of four tables having area referees. A small negative is that there were four tables in the back of the room for which there was no good seating. Still, the schedule was maintained and the quality of play was electrifying, with a lot of really competitive matches along the way.

The Tournament in Hindsight
Filler was, of course, the biggest story of the week. With wins at the 2026 Derby City 9ball, the 2026 Las Vegas 10ball and now the 2026 UK Open, he is head and shoulders above the rest of the pack. Anyone who thinks Fedor is even in the conversation for best rotation pool player in the world is delusional. In fact, it is a couple of years since Fedor beat Josh in any match involving rotation pool. We all understand that for all around play, the Filler/Gorst debate is alive and kicking, and perhaps Fedor is still best in that regard, but Josh is well above the pack at rotation pool and his “A” game brings to mind Earl’s “A” game of some thirty years ago. Filler’s 24 racks won to 3 lost on day six reminds us that he owns a gear that no other player has. Nobody but Josh produces efforts like this one. When he is really on, it doesn’t much matter how well his opponents play.

Nonetheless, Josh was hardly the only story. Jonas Souto was a big story. 2025 was a breakout year for him, and it looks like he has taken yet another step forward in his game. Mario He was a big story, knocking off some tough opponents before being eliminated by Filler. Mario has a 2nd and a 9th place finish in the first two WNT majors of the year. Elliot Sanderson was a big story, too, producing his first ever top 10 in a WNT major. Jayson Shaw is looking strong again, with a semifinal appearance in both the 2025 Philippines Open and the 2026 UK Open. Jayson might be ready to win something big soon. Despite his quarterfinal loss to Shaw, David Alcaide was in dead stroke all week. Szewczyk was brilliant, as he so often is, and his loss in the finals should not take the shine off that brilliance.

Top Americans Absent, Other Americans Impressed
Three of the members of 2025 Team USA (SVB, Thorpe, Woodward) were absent and each has now missed the first two WNT majors of the year. I respect their right to pick and choose, but it is still disappointing for this fan who enjoys watching them compete. On the brighter side, Tyler Styer was showing solid form, including a fine win over Neuhausen and young American Lukas Fracasso Verner is playing well and merits serious Mosconi consideration. Each finished tied for 17th.

The Hotel
Many of the players, fans, and tournament staff stayed at the Brentwood Holiday Inn, and I was among them. I was very pleased with my room, the hotel amenities, and the food at the hotel was pretty darn good.

Referees
The referees were consistently outstanding, and I made sure to say congratulations to head referee Marcel on a job well done before leaving the venue on day six.

Matchroom Staff
Congratulations to all at Matchroom on exemplary administration of the event. Everything ran smoothly and on schedule. On those rare occasions that I needed anything from a staff member I was accommodated with courtesy and promptness.

Socially
I caught up with nearly all the players I had hoped to see, but had substantial time with just a few, including Josh Filler, Felix Vogel, Jayson Shaw, Darren Appleton, Max Lechner, Mario He, and Lukas Fracasso Verner. A few friends, including one of my closest friends from New York City, were present, and thanks to all of them for their good company.

To Sum
Well played, Josh Filler, but many made a statement at the UK Open. I sure hope I get to go again next year. Thanks to all at Matchroom.
 
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I just returned from Brentwood, Essex, England where I took in all six days of the WNT UK Open. It was fantastic.

The Setup of the Tournament
I am sure that a few have whined loudly about the lack of air conditioning at the Brentwood Centre, but only day one had very hot weather and I was fairly comfortable for the last five days. I’d certainly go back.

The real story was the pool. The field was rock solid. The room was set up the way I like it, with groups of four tables having area referees. A small negative is that there were four tables in the back of the room for which there was no good seating. Still, the schedule was maintained and the quality of play was electrifying, with a lot of really competitive matches along the way.

The Tournament in Hindsight
Filler was, of course, the biggest story of the week. With wins at the 2026 Derby City 9ball, the 2026 Las Vegas 10ball and now the 2026 UK Open, he is head and shoulders above the rest of the pack. Anyone who thinks Fedor is even in the conversation for best rotation pool player in the world is delusional. In fact, it is a couple of years since Fedor beat Josh in any match involving rotation pool. We all understand that for all around play, the Filler/Gorst debate is alive and kicking, and perhaps Fedor is still best in that regard, but Josh is well above the pack at rotation pool and his “A” game brings to mind Earl’s “A” game of some thirty years ago. Filler’s 24 racks won to 3 lost on day six reminds us that he owns a gear that no other player has. Nobody but Josh produces efforts like this one. When he is really on, it doesn’t much matter how well his opponents play.

Nonetheless, Josh was hardly the only story. Jonas Souto was a big story. 2025 was a breakout year for him, and it looks like he has taken yet another step forward in his game. Mario He was a big story, knocking off some tough opponents before being eliminated by Filler. Mario has a 2nd and a 9th place finish in the first two WNT majors of the year. Elliot Sanderson was a big story, too, producing his first ever top 10 in a WNT major. Jayson Shaw is looking strong again, with a semifinal appearance in both the 2025 Philippines Open and the 2026 UK Open. Jayson might be ready to win something big soon. Despite his quarterfinal loss to Shaw, David Alcaide was in dead stroke all week. Szewczyk was brilliant, as he so often is, and his loss in the finals should not take the shine off that brilliance.

Top Americans Absent, Other Americans Impressed
Three of the members of 2025 Team USA (SVB, Thorpe, Woodward) were absent and each has now missed the first two WNT majors of the year. I respect their right to pick and choose, but it is still disappointing for this fan who enjoys watching them compete. On the brighter side, Tyler Styer was showing solid form, including a fine win over Neuhausen and young American Lukas Fracasso Verner is playing well and merits serious Mosconi consideration. Each finished tied for 17th.

The Hotel
Many of the players, fans, and tournament staff stayed at the Brentwood Holiday Inn, and I was among them. I was very pleased with my room, the hotel amenities, and the food at the hotel was pretty darn good.

Referees
The referees were consistently outstanding, and I made sure to say congratulations to head referee Marcel on a job well done before leaving the venue on day six.

Matchroom Staff
Congratulations to all at Matchroom on exemplary administration of the event. Everything ran smoothly and on schedule. On those rare occasions that I needed anything from a staff member I was accommodated with courtesy and promptness.

Socially
I caught up with nearly all the players I had hoped to see, but had substantial time with just a few, including Josh Filler, Felix Vogel, Jayson Shaw, Darren Appleton, Max Lechner, Mario He, and Lukas Fracasso Verner. A few friends, including one of my closest friends from New York City, were present, and thanks to all of them for their good company.

To Sum
Well played, Josh Filler, but many made a statement at the UK Open. I sure hope I get to go again next year. Thanks to all at Matchroom.
Any idea what happened to Darren wearing or rather not wearing his pool glasses?
 
I just returned from Brentwood, Essex, England where I took in all six days of the WNT UK Open. It was fantastic. ...

I was looking forward to this. Thanks for a great trip report. It looks like the UK Open was a huge success.

One thing you didn't mention, though I suppose it's not all that relevant, was the British drummers who escorted the Last 16 onto the stage. Interestingly, Eklent Kaci was missing when the players marched out, even though his name was announced. I'm curious what happened, why he was late, and how he looked once competition began. He usually brings his famous game face. But I do wonder if there was anything noticeable on his performance.
 
Not just the Americans were absent, many top Asian players as well. Many of them preferred to play Chinese 9ball in a big tournament that was taking place at the same time. I think that staying in Asia and the bigger money makes it an easy choice for them.
Still a strong field of players made a great tournament.
I don’t think that any player can come close to Filler when he’s on.
 
The conditions at the UK open definitely suited Filler.

Pockets were generous and he had a easy run to the title.

Fedor got Khalid and Capito in his first 2 matches.

Filler got Appleton and Nigel Smith in his first 2 matches, easy wins.

How is that fair? Fedor is WNT 1 so he should not be getting Khalid in his first round match.

Fedor also arrived late as he was playing in another tournament.

I am confident Fedor will show Filler who is number 1 at the US Open.
 
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The conditions at the UK open definitely suited Filler.

Pockets were generous and he had a easy run to the title.

Fedor got Khalid and Capito in his first 2 matches.

Filler got Appleton and Nigel Smith in his first 2 matches, easy wins.

How is that fair? Fedor is WNT 1 so he should not be getting Khalid in his first round match.

Fedor also arrived late as he was playing in another tournament.

I am confident Fedor will show Filler who is number 1 at the US Open.
Pockets were the same for all, and how 4 inch pockets are generous?
When was Fedor's last WNT major win? how is he still #1?
Filler had strong opponents as well, he just kept them in their seats...
I think that by the end of the year, Fedor will lose his #1 ranking
 
The conditions at the UK open definitely suited Filler.

Pockets were generous and he had a easy run to the title.

Fedor got Khalid and Capito in his first 2 matches.

Filler got Appleton and Nigel Smith in his first 2 matches, easy wins.

How is that fair? Fedor is WNT 1 so he should not be getting Khalid in his first round match.

Fedor also arrived late as he was playing in another tournament.

I am confident Fedor will show Filler who is number 1 at the US Open.
I am not sure Khalid is better than Appleton, and in any case, Fedor should have beaten him. Fedor was also up 9-4 vs Capito in a race to 10. Fedor is the reason Fedor lost. Arriving late is on him.

Still, I am surprised Filler won't agree to a head to head with Fedor in 10 ball.
 
I would be curious to know how sjm rates Filler's performance in the UK Open final. Might be the best I've ever seen from him in a big WNT or Predator event in the final stages of a tourney. His two matches on the final day were dominating.

I thought it was a great event.
 
Pockets were the same for all, and how 4 inch pockets are generous?
When was Fedor's last WNT major win? how is he still #1?
Filler had strong opponents as well, he just kept them in their seats...
I think that by the end of the year, Fedor will lose his #1 ranking
A few of the players suggested to me that the new cloth is causing the tables to play a bit looser than in the past.
I was looking forward to this. Thanks for a great trip report. It looks like the UK Open was a huge success.

One thing you didn't mention, though I suppose it's not all that relevant, was the British drummers who escorted the Last 16 onto the stage. Interestingly, Eklent Kaci was missing when the players marched out, even though his name was announced. I'm curious what happened, why he was late, and how he looked once competition began. He usually brings his famous game face. But I do wonder if there was anything noticeable on his performance.
Sadly, I showed up a bit late for the Saturday afternoon session. I heard the festivities from outside the entrance, and the display sounded very impressive. Didn't know about the Kaci thing.
 
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I would be curious to know how sjm rates Filler's performance in the UK Open final. Might be the best I've ever seen from him in a big WNT or Predator event in the final stages of a tourney. His two matches on the final day were dominating.

I thought it was a great event.
I'd put it a little below his effort at the Las Vegas Open 10 ball, where he beat each of SVB, Biado, and Gorst to win the title. Josh can steamroll just about anybody at a moment's notice. At Las Vegas, he won the final eight racks in the final against Gorst. At the Derby City 9ball, he won the final nine racks of his match with Gorst and later beat SVB 9-0. Fedor hasn't beat Josh at 9ball or 10ball for a long, long time. The only guy who gave Josh a real test at the 2026 UK Open was Feijen, who played at an elite level in a 10-7 loss.

I'd also say that Josh was a bit more dominant than this at the 2025 European Open, in which he won the final 13-1 against Naoyuki Oi. The only other player I've seen in all my years around pool that so often steamrolled elite opponents like this was prime Strickland.

No doubt, Josh offered one of his best ever efforts in the final vs Szewczyk, a player that had been in dead stroke all week, but it is just one of many times that he has produced a master class performance in a final. He is the best closer since prime Mike Sigel of the 1980s. He tends not to get the credit for his defense, but he is on the short list of the best defensive players in the world. He is also one of the best kickers I have ever seen. He is a finished product with an all-around arsenal that is simply mind-blowing.

Only the haters will deny that Filler is already in the conversation for the best 9ball player of all time. Like all the great champions that came before him, he's very beatable, but he has a gear that sometimes makes him unbeatable. My guess is that he'll retire with the greatest resume of titles since that of Mosconi.
 
I am confident Fedor will show Filler who is number 1 at the US Open.
Yeah, after about two years of losing every single 9ball and every single 10ball match to Josh, Fedor is definitely due. Perhaps, as you suggest, the US Open 9ball will be where Fedor turns the tables on him. I am a fan of Fedor, and I'd love to see him regain his top gear, which we haven't seen in a while.
 
Fedor got Khalid and Capito in his first 2 matches.

Filler got Appleton and Nigel Smith in his first 2 matches, easy wins.
LOL, Khalid is hardly a tough draw, and he plays a similar speed to Appleton right now. Fedor only found Capito in his draw due to his fist round loss. Robbie had not been in Fedor's draw at all.

Actually, two players that were in dead stroke all week were Feijen and Szewczyk, and Josh has to beat both of them, along with Shaw. That's a tough draw.
 
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The conditions at the UK open definitely suited Filler.

Pockets were generous and he had a easy run to the title.

Fedor got Khalid and Capito in his first 2 matches.

Filler got Appleton and Nigel Smith in his first 2 matches, easy wins.

How is that fair? Fedor is WNT 1 so he should not be getting Khalid in his first round match.

Fedor also arrived late as he was playing in another tournament.

I am confident Fedor will show Filler who is number 1 at the US Open.
If you're in love with Fedor just say that.
 
with filler being way to good for anyone. it almost means you are playing for 2nd place money and on down. not worth showing up for the majority, unless finishing very high, you don't even break even for expenses.
 
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