WWE Velocity
|
|
This article needs additional citations for verification. Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources. Unsourced material may be challenged and removed. (January 2012) |
| Velocity | |
|---|---|
| Format | Sports entertainment |
| Created by | Vince McMahon |
| Starring | SmackDown! Brand |
| Country of origin | United States |
| No. of episodes | 204 |
| Production | |
| Running time | 46 minutes |
| Broadcast | |
| Original channel | Spike TV (2002-2005) Webcast (2005-2006) |
| Original run | May 25, 2002 – June 11, 2006 |
WWE Velocity is a professional wrestling television program produced by World Wrestling Entertainment (WWE). It replaced two syndicated WWE shows, Jakked/Metal. Once a weekly Saturday night show on Spike TV and on Sky Sports 2 in the UK on Sunday mornings, Velocity became a webcast from 2005 to 2006. The newest episode would be uploaded to WWE.com on Saturdays and be available for the next week. Older webcast episodes were also archived. It was the counterpart show to WWE SmackDown and WWE Raw and was recorded before the television taping of SmackDown!
Contents |
[edit] History
WWE Velocity was primarily used to summarize major occurrences on the latest episode of SmackDown!, which aired Thursday and later Friday nights on UPN. Due to the WWE Brand Extension, Velocity aired matches and content from the SmackDown brand.[1] The format was set to mirror that of WWE Heat and its relation to the Raw brand.[1]
Following WWE Raw moved from Spike TV back to the USA Network in 2005, Velocity and its Raw brand counterpart, Heat, were discontinued from television broadcast in the United States and Canada and became webcasts streamed on WWE.com. Internationally, Velocity and Heat continued to be broadcast on their respective television networks due to WWE's international programming commitments.
The last episode of Velocity aired internationally on June 10, 2006. It was also the last episode to be streamed on WWE.com.
[edit] Notable championship match
Only the Cruiserweight Championship changed hands once when Nunzio defeated Paul London to win the title.
[edit] Commentators
| Commentator(s) | Year(s) Active |
|---|---|
| Michael Cole | 2002 (alternated) |
| Tazz | 2002 (alternated) |
| Josh Mathews | 2002 (alternated) |
| Marc Loyd | 2002 (alternated) |
| Al Snow | 2002 (alternated) |
| Josh Mathews Ernest Miller |
2003 |
| Josh Mathews Tazz |
July 2003 |
| Josh Mathews Bill DeMott |
November 2003 - December 2004 |
| Steve Romero Josh Mathews |
December 2004 - June 11, 2006 |
[edit] Ring announcers
| Ring announcers | Dates |
|---|---|
| Howard Finkel | 2002 |
| Lilian Garcia | 2003 |
| Justin Roberts | 2004 |
| Tony Chimel | 2005–June 11, 2006 |
[edit] General Manager
| General Manager | Dates |
|---|---|
| Paul Heyman | May 25, 2002 - October 16, 2003 |
| Theodore Long | October 23, 2003- July 17, 2004 |
| William Regal General Manager Interim | July 24, 2004-December 31, 2004 |
| Finlay | January 1, 2005– June 11, 2006 |
[edit] Television and internet schedules
- United States
-
- The New TNN/Spike TV - Saturday Nights (2002- 2005)
- WWE.Com - Saturdays (2005- 2006)
- United Kingdom
-
- Sky Sports - Sunday Nights (2002- 2004)
- Sky Sports - Sunday Mornings ( 2005- 2006)
[edit] References
- ^ a b Shields, Brian; Sullivan, Kevin (2009). WWE Encyclopedia. DK. p. 97. ISBN 978-075664190-0.
[edit] External links
|
|||||