TNA Wrestling’s Silent Liquidation: Stripping the Car for Parts
The news hit the wires today: Sinner and Saint (Judas Icarus and Travis Williams) have been released by TNA.
If you’ve been paying attention to the WrestleVoice coverage, you know this isn’t an isolated "cost-cutting" move. It’s the latest indicator of a systematic teardown.
"When a promotion sheds its creative soul (Dreamer), lets go of top female talent like Tessa Blanchard, Dani Luna, and Killer Kelly, and drops its most reliable indie-proven stars (Sinner and Saint) alongside veteran mainstays like Eric Young, Sami Callihan, and Mike Santana, you aren't watching a 'restructuring.' You’re watching a fire sale.
Anthem is Stripping the Car for Parts.
While corporate mouthpieces continue to deny the sale rumors, the logic remains undeniable: you don't gut your roster, push out the people who understand the product's DNA, and move toward a skeleton-crew production model if you’re planning on being in the wrestling business long-term.
Scott D’Amore confirmed he made a legitimate play to save the company and was shut out. Now, we’re seeing the fallout. Anthem isn't looking for a "new era"; they’re looking for a clean ledger and a turn-key IP to hand off to the highest bidder.
For the fans, the "Impact" is gone. We’re just watching the final laps before the engine cuts out. The only question left isn't if they're selling, but who is left to buy the scraps.

