Tag: Releases

  • AEW Denies Contract Negotiations With Aleister Black

    AEW Denies Contract Negotiations With Aleister Black

    Aleister Black was apart of WWE’s most recent crop of releases late last month. Aleister is a former AEW wrestler, as well. Naturally people started speculating on if he could once again be ‘All Elite.’

    Today, SEScoops put out a report that AEW and Aleister Black were currently in some sort of contract negotiations, which had fans raising their eyebrows. Now, Fightful’s Sean Ross Sapp has reported that after reaching out to AEW about the matter, they’ve denied that they’re currently in negotiations with Black.

    Aliester Black is only about 2 or so weeks into his 90-day no compete. He will be available to sign anywhere after the 90 day period

  • Details Revealed On Recent WWE Pay Cuts And New Day’s Departure

    Details Revealed On Recent WWE Pay Cuts And New Day’s Departure

    WWE has been chopping down contracts and releasing talent over the last few weeks, and it’s brought a lot of shock, surprise, and anger out from many fans and wrestlers alike.

    One of the biggest shocks was The New Day’s Kofi Kingston and Xavier Woods departing from WWE after it felt like they’d be lifers with the company. Kofi was with WWE for nearly 20 years and was a locker room leader. But, they’re now gone.

    Today, Fightful Select reported a lengthy piece that revealed details surrounding New Day’s WWE departure, and revealing that WWE was tasked with shedding “millions” in payroll.

    “We’re told WWE was tasked with shedding “millions” in payroll over the last month or so, and cuts were made in order to make that a reality. This was met with heavy criticism within the industry, as the pay packages for TKO executives were revealed at the same time as record-high stocks. Most of the people within the industry we spoke to know that releases are a reality of WWE’s plans moving forward, but beyond that, asking talent to take a paycut of seven figures per year in many cases was heavily criticized and scoffed at.

    We spoke to some within the talent and agent worlds who said that this round of cuts and paycuts will likely cause heavy changes in how talent negotiate contracts with TKO and WWE moving forward, noting that there is very little confidence that the life-changing, big money deals that a lot of wrestlers sign will see through the life of the deals.

    Fightful Select’s Sean Ross Sapp was told that a number of wrestlers in recent years were approached during overseas dates about new deals, some way earlier than they anticipated being offered new deals. Some there saw this as an approach to get talent to sign before their reps could take a look at things, but that was more of an opinion than anything. However, the day of the mass releases, WWE approached numerous talent and asked them to take pay cuts in order to remain with the company. Several of them that we heard about were given two days to make that decision. New Day’s Austin Creed and Kofi Kingston pretty quickly made the decision that they would rather leave the company. Despite the pay cut offered, the duo still left millions of dollars on the table over the next four years. In a similar situation, when Killer Kross was given his contract offer last year, he claimed he was given only one day to decide.

    We have heard nothing to the rumors that Xavier Woods could return on a digital only deal, as that would prevent him from working for AEW, and effectively cost him millions of dollars over the next few years. As one would expect, a ton of names have pushed internally in All Elite Wrestling for New Day to be hired.

    That led to another point of frustration among talent — New Day, Santos Escobar and others had just signed new deals with WWE in the last year, with some of them not even engaging All Elite Wrestling or other companies. Now with WWE cutting them and their pay, it effectively reduces their leverage. A number of reps noted that it wasn’t even smart from a competitive standpoint because you would think that WWE would want AEW to have to spend more money for talent.

    No specific names were provided to Fightful regarding who accepted pay cuts, but the percentages shifted across a variety of what has been reported. For those asking why it was easy to find out that New Day were offered pay cuts compared to who actually took them, WWE moving them to the alumni section made it a whole lot easier to learn those stories. We’re told that a number of longtime veterans were asked, including some healing up from injuries.

    One WWE source had been referenced by another outlet as saying they were disgusted that WWE didn’t publicly acknowledge New Day for their contributions. A WWE source said that they did communicate that glowingly privately, and that a joint statement was expected to be issued announcing the departure, and they have no clue why that didn’t end up being the case.”

    We will continue to provide updates on more information on WWE cuts as information is gained.

    H/T Fightful Select

  • Chelsea Green: From WWE Release to Reinvention

    Chelsea Green: From WWE Release to Reinvention

    Just days after a mass release of WWE talent, I caught myself scrolling through old independent wrestling matches on YouTube. It started with GCW Presents Joey Janela’s Spring Break X. Then about a hour later I stumbled across some Matt Cardona GCW videos. What stood out most was not just Cardona’s transformation from WWE to the independents and back to WWE—it was Chelsea Green (no disrespect, Broski).

    It caught me off guard in the best way. Seeing where she was compared to where she is now made me stop and think about how impressive her journey really was— not just returning to WWE, but turning that second chance into a legitimate rise to stardom.

    There is something fitting about the chaos that follows Chelsea Green.

    Not just the character — the exaggerated, loud, “can I speak to your manager?!” energy — but the journey itself. Because if you zoom out, her return to WWE was not a clean redemption arc. It was messy, unpredictable and, at times, unfair. Double down on the messy.

    And that is exactly why it worked.

    The release that could have been the end

    When WWE released Green in 2021, it felt abrupt. She had barely scratched the surface of what she could be on that stage. After a November 2020 debut, she was released just a few months later while sidelined with a broken wrist. The odds seemed stacked against her.

    For many wrestlers, that is where momentum dies.

    Green did not disappear, she recalibrated.

    Across the independent scene and other promotions, she leaned harder into what made her different. The “Hot Mess” persona that made her a fan favorite evolved into something sharper, more intentional and impossible to ignore.

    A return to Impact Wrestling followed. Teaming with Deonna Purrazzo, the duo captured the Impact Knockouts World Tag Team Championship on Aug. 12, 2022, holding the titles for 56 days. More importantly, her attitude and charisma did not change — they grew. That evolution quickly became an attraction for those watching back in WWE.

    She was not trying to prove she could hang in the ring, everyone knows she can wrestle.

    She was proving she could stand out.

    Reinvention over reintroduction

    Standing out is what made WWE pick up the phone.

    By the time she returned in 2023, Green was not the same performer who had been released. She understood something crucial: Being memorable matters just as much as being technically sound.

    Almost immediately, she carved out a role. While others chased dominance, Green embraced disruption. Complaining, scheming and overreacting, she became a character audiences could recognize instantly. One that you can’t ignore. That kind of clarity is rare, and valuable.

    Turning comedy into championships

    For years, the knock on Green was simple: She was entertaining, but not someone you built a division around.

    Then she started stacking accomplishments.

    Her first major statement came in the tag division, capturing the WWE Women’s Tag Team Championships alongside Sonya Deville and later Piper Niven. She quickly became a fan favorite.

    The real turning point came with the introduction of the Women’s United States Championship. Green became the inaugural titleholder and later the first two-time champion.

    The narrative shifted. When you’re that talented, it’s really hard to ignore. 

    She did not abandon the comedy.

    She proved it could carry gold.

    The power of commitment

    What separates Green is not just the character — it is the commitment.

    Every entrance, every segment and every exaggerated reaction feels deliberate. There is no half-measure. From podcasts and interviews (can I get one?), to dumpsters, red carpets and the WWE ring, every appearance feels intentional. There is 100% effort no matter what the task at hand is.

    She has a knack for turning the smallest moments into something memorable.

    In an era where many blur the line between performer and person, Green leans fully into performance — and that is what makes it work.

    It would not be surprising if Hollywood comes calling.

    Why this run matters

    Chelsea Green’s rise back into WWE relevance is not about a single title.

    It is about proof. Proof that personality still matters. Proof that character work still creates stars. Proof that charisma can be louder than redemption.

    She did not return as a question mark, or a feel good story.

    She came back as an answer — a statement in itself.

    Final thoughts

    Chelsea Green was never supposed to be the safe bet.

    But in a landscape where everyone is fighting to stand out, that unpredictability became her greatest strength.

    This was not just comeback.

    It is a reminder that sometimes the loudest, and messiest path is the one that actually works.

    This week was a bad one for many of the talent let go, but this not the end of the road.

  • Several Names Released From WWE Contracts

    Several Names Released From WWE Contracts

    Several WWE superstars have been released/departed from their WWE contracts Friday evening ahead of SmackDown. Below is the current list of every WWE departure.

    WWE Releases:

    • Uncle Howdy (Bo Dallas)
    • Nikki Cross
    • Joe Gacy
    • Erick Rowan
    • Dexter Lumis
    • Alba Fyre
    • Zoey Stark
    • Andre Chase
    • Dante Chen
    • Aleister Black
    • Zelina Vega
    • Alex Shelley
    • Chris Sabin
    • Kairi Sane
    • Apollo Crews
    • Santos Escobar
    • Tyson DuPont

    • Tyriek Igwe

    • Chris Island
    • Tyra Mae Steele
    • Sirena Linton
    • Trill London
    • Malik Blade
    • Luca Crusifino

    The entire Bodyslam team sends our well wishes to the talent released and can’t wait to see what the future holds for these talented men and women.