WWF Championship Wrestling
WWF Championship Wrestling | |
---|---|
Created by | WWF roster |
Country of origin | United States |
Original language | English |
Original release | |
Network | Syndicated |
Release | February 1971 August 30, 1986 | –
Related | |
|
WWF Championship Wrestling is a
Select episodes are available for streaming on the WWE Network.
History
Run in syndication
This was the first WWF program to be shown on national broadcast television. Vincent J. McMahon built the
In its early years, the show was taped at the Philadelphia Arena and later at the Allentown Agricultural Hall in Allentown, Pennsylvania. Typically, three weeks of television were taped in one night. The final taping in Allentown took place on June 19, 1984, with the episodes airing June 30, July 7, and July 14. The tapings then moved to the Mid-Hudson Civic Center in Poughkeepsie, New York until the final taping took place on August 5, 1986, with the final episode airing on August 30. The final taping featured the coronation of King Harley Race.
The following week, WWF Superstars of Wrestling replaced Championship Wrestling as the WWF's new flagship syndicated program. In contrast to Championship Wrestling, the tapings for Superstars of Wrestling moved around the country and took place at larger arenas.
Announcers
- Bill Cardille (1971–1972) (1976) (Bill Cardille subbed for Vince McMahon for 3 weeks in the summer of 1976)
- Vincent K. McMahon and Antonino Rocca (1972–1976)
- Vincent K. McMahon and Bruno Sammartino (1976–1980)
- Vince McMahon and Pat Patterson(1980–1983) (Bruno Sammartino occasionally substituted for Patterson)
- Vince McMahon and "Mean" Gene Okerlund (1984)
- Vince McMahon and Tony Garea (1984)
- Vince McMahon and "Living Legend" Bruno Sammartino (1984–1986) (Jesse "The Body" Ventura occasionally substituted for Sammartino)
Ray Stevens and André the Giant both guested as announcers alongside McMahon.
The longtime ring announcer was Joe McHugh, who did the ring announcing and introductions of everyone on staff at the beginning of every broadcast since the 1970s. When the WWF relocated their tapings in 1984, he was replaced by Howard Finkel. Buddy Wagner preceded McHugh in the mid-1970s when the cards were taped at the Philadelphia Arena.
Interviewers
The interviewer position was filled mostly by McMahon with Pat Patterson also assisting in some cases, until the hire of Gene Okerlund in 1984 which gave him the full-time slot of interviewing wrestlers backstage or at ringside. Jack Reynolds, Freddie Miller, Kal Rudman, and Ken Resnick also did interviews alongside Okerlund until the show's cancellation in 1986.
- Vince McMahon (1972–83)
- Pat Patterson (1980–83)
- Gene Okerlund (1984–86)
- Freddie Miller (1984–85)
- Jack Reynolds (1984–85)
- Kal Rudman (1984–85)
- Ken Resnick (1986)
Theme music
Probably the most well-remembered theme music of Championship Wrestling is "Scheherazade" by jazz trumpeter
Various pop music was used for commercial bumpers starting in late 1982, including "
International broadcasts
The inaugural
References
- ^ Sports Illustrated, March 18, 1985 issue, Hogan on the cover