Summary

Pat Buck has publicly criticized TNA and Carlos Silva after Nic Nemeth was removed from a previously announced match with MJF at CAP Wrestling on May 1.

Buck said the main event had already been approved and promoted before the change was made roughly three weeks ahead of the show. He argued that even if Nemeth was not fully pulled from the event, changing a main event at that stage has the same effect for an independent promotion trying to sell a card around a featured match.

The issue also lands after MJF's WrestlePro return against Pat Buck had already put Buck back in the middle of a storyline involving MJF outside the major television promotions.

CAP Wrestling's issue with the change

Buck framed the situation as a larger problem for independent wrestling, saying CAP Wrestling and WrestlePro rely on live events both as a business and as a way to develop wrestlers. He said promotions such as his help talent stay sharp and make money, and he took issue with a wrestling company stepping in to alter a match that had already been used to promote the show.

He also said that when one promotion causes a problem for another promoter's event, the expectation should be to help repair the card rather than simply leave the affected show to deal with the fallout on its own.

Quote from Pat Buck

"I don't usually speak on things like this, but this one's too ridiculous to ignore.

TNA, specifically Carlos Silva, forced a change to the main event of our Create A Pro show three weeks out after it was already approved and promoted.

Not sure who that helps.

Create A Pro is a training school with a promotion focused on developing talent while running consistent live events. We're a school, dojo, and a mom and pop business... just with two dads.

Live events are a necessary training tool, and they're disappearing, even at the highest levels, because they're not as cost effective and the money is in television. In a direct way, we are providing a service for your talent to make $ and keep their skills sharp. Do you not see that?

We train wrestlers for wrestling companies. And now a wrestling company has stepped in and hurt another wrestling company that helps wrestlers get to wrestling companies. Makes perfect sense. Maybe I'm the one missing something.

I'm annoyed, as it's hard to ignore how unnecessary, and honestly how cringe, this situation is.

And to be fair, talent wasn't pulled, but altering a main event match like that on our limited stage has the same impact. Anyone who has actually promoted shows understands that.

When something changes that affects another promoter's show, you make it right. Whether that means sending talent, strengthening the card, or finding a way to return value, you don't just create the problem and walk away from it.

That didn't happen here. And if any attempt is made now to make it right, it's a bit too late. You meet people with grace, not chaos.

Create A Pro isn't a competing media company. It's a training ground that built its own platform to develop talent. No TV deal, no streaming, and we're not attached to any bigger company, yet.

Between CAP/WrestlePro, we run around 25 events a year and reinvest back into us, our leases, rings, and the equipment needed to put on shows.

Equipment that, at one point, your company needed to rent to operate in this market. And at another point, when your company needed content and additional matches, talent was placed on Create A Pro and WrestlePro shows because there wasn't enough content to support it. Did anyone let you know about a past positive relationship?

Years ago your company used our students for extra work in a meaningful way. Now it looks more like carrot dangling, ring crew, and helping with catering but that's an entirely different conversation.

Create A Pro has been a pipeline and a support system to just about every major company in wrestling. Most people know that. (Unless you ask the WWE ID program, then we apparently don't exist.)

I'm willing to believe Carlos may not know who I am, and that's fine. But if you're in an executive position, you should probably understand the room you're operating in and the etiquette that comes with it. Maybe Tony Khan can give a quick crash course on how to protect your brand while still helping the overall scene. It's times like this I'm glad to work for someone who actually champions the entire sport, not tries to shrink it.

And yeah, I'm on the payroll but these words are from experience not influence.

At the end of the day, we'll adjust like we always do. But if the goal is to grow this industry, or even your own company, this isn't the way to do it.

Keep it up!"

What CAP Wrestling and TNA face next

CAP Wrestling now has to rebuild a promoted main event on short notice, and TNA has turned a one-match change into a public dispute with a promoter that Buck says has previously supported the company.

For fans, the biggest immediate effect is simple: the advertised Nemeth versus MJF match is off, and the attention has shifted from the bout itself to the relationship between promotions, talent commitments, and how much freedom wrestlers actually have for outside dates.

Sources

As reported by Fightful.