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One last sprint, one last swing, and Muscat delivered. With WTT Star Contender Muscat 2025 in the books, the cast for WTT Finals Hong Kong 2025 (10–14 December) is all but complete across Women’s Singles, Men’s Singles and Mixed Doubles. Only the Mixed Doubles wildcard remains — and the reveal will have the final say before the lights go up in Hong Kong.

In Women’s Singles, Joo Cheonhui claimed the final ticket with a composed, no-drama semi in Muscat, turning back Kim Nayeong 3–1 (11–7, 11–2, 5–11, 11–7). It caps a season for Joo that kept trending up: semifinal runs at WTT Champions Montpellier and WTT Contender Buenos Aires, quarterfinals at China Smash, WTT Star Contender Foz do Iguaçu and WTT Star Contender Chennai. Joo’s form is real; the timing is right.

Men’s Singles added three names with very different signatures. Alexis Lebrun punched through after a sharp, quarterfinals win over Lin Yun-Ju (11–4, 11–9, 11–8) on his way to the Muscat finals; another reminder that when he leans in, rallies tilt fast. Simon Gauzy arrives off the best campaign of his career: a semifinal at Europe Smash – Sweden, consecutive quarterfinals at WTT Champions Montpellier and WTT Champions Frankfurt, and a win at WTT Feeder Otočec II that set the tempo early. An Jaehyun completed the grid with a year built on big rooms and big points — quarterfinals at Europe Smash – Sweden and WTT Champions Yokohama, a WTT Contender semifinal in Zagreb, and a finals run in Taiyuan. Different routes; same destination: December in Hong Kong.

Mixed Doubles tightened, too. Hugo Calderano and Bruna Takahashi qualified off a season of deep runs — semifinals at China Smash, quarterfinals at Europe Smash – Sweden and WTT Star Contender Foz do Iguaçu, and finals at WTT Contender Buenos Aires and WTT Star Contender Ljubljana. Alvaro Robles and Maria Xiao arrive with range and bite — semifinals at Singapore Smash, quarterfinals at US Smash, China Smash, WTT Star Contender Doha and Ljubljana, plus the title in WTT Contender Muscat earlier in the year that started it all.

That makes seven pairs confirmed, and leaves one final seat in the shadows. The Mixed Doubles wildcard is coming, and it won’t be quiet: a double-name drop that can tilt matchups, and redraw tactics. Who will step into the fire? The reveal is close.

Demand hasn’t blinked. Due to overwhelming demand, limited seats have been added for Sessions 5 to 10, and will be released on Tuesday, 25 November at 11:00 (GMT+8) and exclusively on UUTIX and Maoyan.

Sessions 1–4 are selling quickly across all platforms (URBTIX, UUTIX, Maoyan). For fans building a full week in the city, Trip.com has Hong Kong experience bundles to pair match sessions with the best of the city: your schedule, your pace, your angle on the WTT Finals.

Five days. The world’s best. One finish line, in a city built to hold big moments in sport. Hong Kong is ready.