The University of Houston is listed among the largest creditors in the XFL’s bankruptcy filings released Monday.

Owned by Vince McMahon’s Alpha Entertainment, the XFL filed for Chapter 11 bankruptcy just three days after the league suspended operations and terminated all its employees due to the coronavirus pandemic. The eight-team league included the Houston Roughnecks.

UH, which leased out office space and TDECU Stadium for Roughnecks’ home games, is owed $294,461.90 in unsecured claims for venue costs, according to the filing.

The league’s estimated assets were listed between $10 and $50 million.

The largest creditors were the St. Louis Sports Commission ($1.6 million), Bexel NEP ($1.2 million) and Dallas Renegades coach Bob Stoops ($1.083 million).

Roughnecks coach June Jones is owed $583,333.33.

“Losing the XFL, that’s going to hurt,” Houston athletic director Chris Pezman said earlier this month. “We were really looking forward to the success they were having.”

The XFL in March canceled the remaining five weeks of its 10-week regular season and playoffs, which was to include a championship game April 26 at TDECU Stadium. Led by quarterback P.J. Walker, the Roughnecks were the XFL’s only unbeaten team at the time of the shutdown.

The Roughnecks averaged 18,230 fans for three home games at TDECU Stadium, which ranked third in the eight-team league behind teams in Seattle and St. Louis. The XFL also had teams in Arlington, Washington, D.C., Los Angeles and Tampa.

Three of the league’s four opening-week games drew more than three million viewers, matching the debut season of the short-lived Alliance of American Football.

Viewership dropped by double digits in Week 2, however, and continued falling through its fifth and final week, when its two over the air games averaged about 1.5 million and two cable games averaged less than a million viewers.

Staff writer David Barron contributed to this report