Given the damage the WPA/Predator-Matchroom dispute caused to both sides, a compromise was inevitable. In 2025, the WPA agreed to “ratify” WNT events it did not explicitly sanction. Bans were also lifted. The two sides pledged to work together.
Far from having won the fight, though, Matchroom has lost some of its momentum. And its own missteps contributed.
The biggest mistake was to ban a qualified Joshua Filler from the Mosconi Cup in 2024. At the time, Matchroom said other Mosconi players did not want Filler to participate.
How come? Filler and other top pros had pledged in August 2024 not to play in WPA events due to the threat of a ban, but he reneged shortly afterward. He was a Predator-sponsored player and realized he’d have to skip big Predator events such as the upcoming World 8-Ball championship (which he won).
Whether other players really wanted Filler excluded, the move to oust him was a big mistake. He is arguably the best player in the world and one of the most popular. WNT, in effect, put its own ban in place. Precisely what it said it would not do.
Matchroom doubled down on its error a year later and quietly banned Shane Van Boening and Filler from participation in the 2025 Reyes Cup as well. These are the players whose support Matchroom needs most crucially.
WNT evidently had rules - nowhere to be found publicly in print - that players had to play in the big Matchroom event (Hanoi) before the Reyes Cup to be eligible. It was all hush-hush, and unseemly, too.
These moves alienated players, cost Matchroom support and shifted the balance of power. The WNT and Predator/WPA are at least on equal terms, and one could argue Predator/WPA now has a slight upper hand.
It’s no surprise SVB has little to say about the WNT and Matchroom these days. He’s skipped three WNT majors in a row and might skip a fourth.
WNT seems to be making amends with Filler, but the damage has been done.
TBC