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First WWE moved all of its programming to its training center in Orlando without fans, determined to continue producing television amid the coronavirus outbreak. The company even held WrestleMania, its annual signature event usually held in a football stadium, instead of postponing it. Then it got a reprieve as Florida, for some reason, deemed professional wrestling an “essential business”, which prompted Vince McMahon to return to live shows every week — starting this past Monday — as opposed to pre-taping.

Now, wrestlers are being released as WWE deals with the economic impact of COVID-19. The company announced Wednesday it cut legend Kurt Angle along with a score of wrestlers: tag-team partners Luke Gallows and Karl Anderson, Drake Maverick, Curt Hawkins, EC3, Lio Rush, Heath Slater, Aiden English and Eric Young. Zack Ryder, Sarah Logan, Erick Rowan, Primo and Epico Colon, Mike and Maria Kanellis and No Way Jose were also reportedly released. Several producers, including Lance Storm, Shane Helms and Fit Finlay, were also let go or furloughed, as was referee Mike Chioda.

Rusev also announced his departure with this tweet: “Thank you All, Rusev out!”

WWE initially announced only five of those names, but slowly added to the list throughout Wednesday afternoon, a sign that the company was scrambling.

“I wanted 2 say thank you to the WWE for the time I spent there,” Angle wrote on Twitter. “I made many new friends and had the opportunity to work with so many talented people. To the Superstars, continue to entertain the WWE Universe as well as you possibly can. They’re the best fans in the world. #itstrue.”

Angle, 51, won an Olympic gold medal as a wrestler in 1996. He became a WWE star in the late ’90s and 2000s. He returned to WWE in 2017 for the first time in 11 years, being inducted into its Hall of Fame and wrestling some matches. His last match was against Baron Corbin at last year’s WrestleMania.

WWE said it is “reducing executive and board member compensation; decreasing operating expenses; cutting talent expenses, third party staffing and consulting; deferring spend on the build out of the Company’s new headquarters for at least six months.” The company, which has not run house shows in over a month, says it will save $4 million a month with the measures “along with cash flow improvement of $140 million primarily from the deferral in spending on the Company’s new headquarters.”

According to Dave Meltzer of the Wrestling Observer Newsletter, WWE has $500 million in cash reserves, was still on track to turn a “significant profit” in 2020 and does not have debt issues.

WWE revealed earlier this week a tournament to determine a new cruiserweight champion for its NXT brand, and Maverick was one of the eight announced competitors. Despite being released, Maverick announced in an emotional goodbye video that he will still participate in the tournament.

“There’s a lot of people I am not going to say goodbye to who I really love and care about…. If these are the last three matches I have, I just want people to know you’ll have my all, my everything. It’s not about a title anymore, it’s about my life, paying my bills,” Maverick said.

Gallows and Anderson were just involved in one of the WrestleMania main events, the boneyard match featuring AJ Styles vs. the Undertaker. The two were part of “The OC” stable with Styles.

This comes on the heels of the XFL shuttering last week, the second failed attempt by McMahon at running the football league.

WWE recently confirmed an employee tested positive for coronavirus.