Krule issues statement on Berwyn Eagles Hall incident

Controversy has led to the end of pro wrestling at the Berwyn Eagles Hall. Now the wrestler at the center of that controversy has issued a statement giving his side of the story. 

Matthew “Krule” Waters had a confrontation with a fan at a Ruthless Pro event at the Eagles Hall in March. Various reports after the fact claimed that Krule had been stabbed by the fan, and as a result the operators of the building declared they would not be hosting any wrestling events going forward.

The last events at the building were an AAW event last Friday and then an independent lucha show on Sunday. On Monday, Krule released a statement on social media.

Krule described the altercation with the fan, with whom he had had “several incidents” throughout the night. “In this moment, l reacted and threw a punch,” the statement reads. “During that incident, I sustained an injury to my side that once I had returned to the locker room was discovered by staff at Berwyn. I do not know how this injury occurred, only that it occurred during the incident. Staff and wrestlers helped bandage me and tend to the wound. I left and was taken to take a shower and driven to the airport, as I had an early flight the next morning for another booking.”

Krule says he spent the night at the airport and woke up to calls from distressed family members. “To be absolutely clear, I never wanted nor asked that this story be represented as fact nor made public,” he writes. “I was contacted by law enforcement, and I fully cooperated with that process. I was asked if I wanted to pursue an investigation. I declined. I told the detective I did not believe I was stabbed, but I had probably fallen on something during the altercation.” 

Krule then said he regretted punching the fan. “I have been angry, remorseful, and every emotion in-between,” he writes. “However, it finally hit me like a brick wall, I was in the wrong. … I could have been a professional and I failed. Thus, I accept full responsibility for everything that occurred. I failed as professional. I have always taken pride in being professional and being a team player with every person I have worked for in my career. I failed and made a bad decision.” 

Krule ended his statement with an apology. “To the wrestlers, fans, and promotions that have been affected by the aftermath of the situation and my bad decision, no words can change what has been done but I do apologize,” he writes. “I have spent more time over these last few weeks hurting emotionally because I hurt each and every one of you. I am sorry. Majority of you don’t know me, the person, only as what I portray as a character, but this incident is not a reflection of who I am. I care about professional wrestling more than I’ve shown through this situation. I will reflect that going forward.”

Update on Chicago venue no longer hosting wrestling after false stabbing rumors

There is an update regarding the future of the Berwyn Eagles Club, a longtime independent wrestling venue in the Chicago area.

The club informed wrestling promoters that it would no longer host wrestling events following a March 28 Ruthless Pro Wrestling show where video circulated online showing a fan being attacked by wrestlers and other attendees. Rumors later spread online claiming a stabbing had occurred.

Earlier this month, police confirmed no stabbing occurred during the incident.

The venue is owned by the Fraternal Order of Eagles and operated by Chuck Marose Sr. and his wife.

A GoFundMe page launched by supporters, not the venue owners themselves, stated that the club had lost its license and was no longer allowed to host wrestling shows.

On Friday, the Chicago Sun-Times reported that Berwyn’s city attorney and chief of police said the venue’s entertainment license had not been revoked as a result of the March 28 incident. The report added that the club normally pays for one officer during wrestling events, and that officials recommended increasing that number to four after the brawl. However, the report did not state that the venue was prohibited from hosting future wrestling events.

On April 17, Conrad Thompson shared correspondence with Berwyn city officials stating that the venue does not require city approval to run wrestling events unless they are held on public property.

The final scheduled wrestling events at the venue are tonight’s AAW Pro Wrestling “Crush & Destroy” and an All Star Lucha Libre show on Saturday.

Famed Chicago venue moving away from wrestling after alleged stabbing incident

The Berwyn Eagles Club in Chicago, Illinois, is getting out of hosting wrestling shows after a recent alleged stabbing incident involving Krule.

As a result, a GCW show scheduled for June 20 had to be cancelled after owner Brett Lauderdale learned about the new policy. A new location has yet to be announced.

Lauderdale took to X Thursday afternoon to air his frustrations:

“This was directly caused by an incident (the fake stabbing) that took place at another promotions event which has caused the town, lawyers & police to be involved. It’s truly a shame to see the Berwyn Eagles and 20+ years of Chicago wrestling history come to an end like this,” he wrote.

The “fake stabbing” is a reference to a late-March incident that saw indie wrestler Krule allegedly stabbed by a fan during a brawl. This took place at his merch table during the final event for deathmatch promotion Ruthless Pro. The wrestler said he was fine afterward and there has been speculation as to whether the incident happened as described.

In a reply to a fan, Lauderdale wrote, “It wasnt a stunt, it was a lie made up by the locker room and the promoters to justify a gang beatdown.”

The final show is an AAW event set for April 24. The promotion noted on X that they were the first wrestling show in the building 22 years ago and will be the last.

“There are thousands of memories within the walls of this venue and it has had such a powerful influence on what you see on tv today. We hope to have you all join us for a final one on 4/24. Everyone at AAW is saddened by this turn of events but we will deliver a last incredible show in Berwyn only as AAW can! Let’s have a great time together!,” they wrote.

MLW releases Mads Krugger

Mads Krugger has been released by MLW, first reported by PWInsider on Sunday.

According to the report, the terms were negotiated several months ago but the release went into effect Sunday. There were no reported reasons given for why the two sides went their separate ways.

The 37-year-old Krugger (Matthew Waters) debuted in MLW in November 2019 as Grogan and later changed his name to Logan Creed. In late-2020, he took on the Krugger character and was a key part of the CONTRA Unit faction that also included former MLW World Champion Jacob Fatu.

After the group split up in late-2021, Krugger and Fatu feuded which ended in Fatu defeating Krugger in a Weapons of Mass Destruction match earlier this year. He most recently had a short feud with Mance Warner that saw Warner defeat him in a tables match in Krugger’s final MLW match.

He has been most recently been working under the name Krule. He held the IWTV Independent title in recent months before it was vacated and won by Matt Tremont this weekend.