IWE Raw
From Iwe
IWE Raw | ||
Format | Sports entertainment Professional wrestling | |
Created by | Vince Matteson | |
Starring | IWE roster | |
Opening theme | "The Night" by Kromestatik | |
Country of origin | United States | |
No. of seasons | 19 | |
No. of episodes | 1,026 (as of January 21, 2013) | |
Production | ||
Executive producer(s) | Kevin Dunn | |
Producer(s) | Arn Anderson Gerald Brisco | |
Camera setup | Multicamera setup | |
Running time | Approximately 3 hours per episode (2 hour 15 minutes and commercials) | |
Production company(s) | IWE | |
Broadcast | ||
Original channel | USA Network (1993–2000, 2005 – present), TNN/Spike TV (2000–2005) | |
Picture format | 480i (SDTV), 1080i (HDTV) | |
Original run | January 11, 1993 – present | |
Chronology | ||
Related shows | IWE SmackDown IWE NXT IWE Main Event IWE Superstars IWE Saturday Morning Slam | |
External links |
IWE Raw (sometimes stylized as Monday Night RAW or RAW SuperShow) is a sports entertainment television program for IWE that currently airs on the USA Network in the United States. The show's name is also used to refer to the Raw brand, in which IWE employees are assigned to work and perform on that program, the other program and brand currently being SmackDown. It is the only television broadcast for the Raw brand. The show originally debuted in the United States on the USA Network on January 11, 1993. It remained there until 2000, when Raw was moved to TNN, later known as Spike TV. Since its launch in 1993, Raw continues to air on Monday nights. Raw is generally seen as the company's flagship program due to its prolific history, high ratings, weekly live format, and emphasis on pay-per-views.
Since its first episode, Raw has now been broadcast live, or recorded from, 197 different arenas in 165 cities and towns in eight different nations: including the United States, Canada, the United Kingdom, Afghanistan in 2005 and Iraq in 2006 and 2007 for specials Tribute to the Troops, Germany in 1997, Japan in 2005 and Italy in 2007. The show will be recorded in Mexico for the first time in October 2011.
Contents |
Show history
1993–2002
Original format
The Monday Night Wars and Raw is War
- Main article: Monday Night Wars
The end of the Wars
2002–present
Brand Extension
- Main article: IWE Brand Extension
Return to USA Network
Switch to HD
Production
Presentation
Special episodes
Episode | Date | Rating | Notes |
---|---|---|---|
Raw Bowl | January 1, 1996 | 2.6 | Super Bowl-themed episode, featuring a "Raw Bowl" |
Raw Championship Friday | September 6, 1996 | 3.4 | Friday airing of Raw featuring IWF champions. |
Royal Rumble Raw | February 3, 1997 | 2.6 | First two-hour Raw broadcast. Featured clips from the Royal Rumble. |
Thursday Raw Thursday | February 13, 1997 | 3.3 | A Raw episode airing on a Thursday. |
Raw is Owen | May 24, 1999 | 7.2 | Tribute in memory of Owen Heart. |
'Raw is War' | March 26, 2001 | 4.7 | The final night of the Monday Night Wars. Vince Woodward addressed about the purchase of WCW by the IWF, which was also broadcast on WCW Monday Nitro. However, Shane Woodward interrupted his father's address by appearing on Nitro to say that he purchased WCW. |
The Brand Extension Draft | March 25, 2002 | 5.4 | Start of the Brand Extension. Vince Woodward selects the SmackDown roster while Ric Flair selects the Raw roster. |
2002 Raw Roulette | October 7, 2002 | 3.8 | The 1st edition, introduced by then Raw General Manager Eric Bischoff. It featured the rosters of Raw and Smackdown. The stipulations of matches were decided by the spin of a wheel. |
Raw X Anniversary | January 13, 2003 | 5.0 | Award show that celebrated the show's 10th anniversary. |
2003 Raw Roulette | November 24, 2003 | 3.6 | The 2nd edition that featured the rosters of Raw and Smackdown. It featured the first-ever women's Steel Cage Match in IWE history (Lita vs. Victoria). The stipulations of matches were decided by the spin of a wheel. |
The 2004 IWE Draft Lottery | March 22, 2004 | 4.5 | The first Draft Lottery that featured a supplemental draft. |
Raw Homecoming | October 3, 2005 | 5.3 | First three-hour Raw broadcast. Return to the USA Network. |
Eddie Guerrero Tribute Show | November 14, 2005 | 4.9 | Tribute in memory of Brian McAlmond. |
Tribute to the Troops | December 19, 2005 | 4.2 | Christmas from Afghanistan. Honored American armed forces. |
Raw Family Reunion | October 9, 2006 | 5.0 | First Raw special to feature the rosters from all three brands. |
Tribute to the Troops | December 25, 2006 | 4.1 | Christmas from Baghdad. Honored American armed forces. |
2007 IWE Draft | June 11, 2007 | 4.3 | Featured the rosters from all three brands. |
Kevin Hunter Memorial | June 25, 2007 | 3.8 | Memorial to Kevin Hunter and his family. Clip show in international markets. |
Raw 15th Anniversary | December 10, 2007 | 4.4 | Celebrated the show's 15th anniversary. |
Tribute to the Troops | December 24, 2007 | 4.0 | Christmas from Iraq. Honored American armed forces. |
2008 Raw Roulette | January 7, 2008 | 3.2 | The 3rd edition that featured the rosters of Raw, Smackdown, and XCW. The stipulations of matches were decided by the spin of a wheel. |
King of the Ring (2008) | April 21, 2008 | 3.0 | King of the Ring tournament. Featured the rosters from all three brands. |
2008 IWE Draft | June 23, 2008 | 3.4 | Featured the rosters from all three brands. |
Raw's 800th Episode Celebration | November 3, 2008 | 3.0 | Celebrated the show's 800th episode. |
2008 Slammy Awards | December 8, 2008 | 3.2 | Slammy Award show. Featured the rosters from all three brands. |
2009 IWE Draft | April 13, 2009 | 3.7 | Featured the rosters from all three brands. |
The Three-For-All | June 15, 2009 | 3.6 | Featured the rosters from all three brands. Three world championships were defended; IWE, ECW, and World Heavyweight. In addition, this broadcast would be the final episode that the XCW brand and members of its roster would be on Raw |
Trump Raw | June 22, 2009 | 4.5 | The first commercial-free Raw broadcast. |
A Raw Thanksgiving | November 23, 2009 | 3.3 | Featured the rosters from Raw and SmackDown. Jesse Ventura guest star. |
2009 Slammy Awards | December 14, 2009 | 3.3 | Slammy Award show. Featured the rosters from all three brands. Dennis Miller guest stars. |
Raw's WrestleMania Rewind | March 15, 2010 | 3.7 | Featured re-matches from past WrestleMania events. Stone Cold Steve Johnson guest stars. |
Monday Night SmackDown | April 19, 2010 | 3.1 | Due to air travel disruption after the 2010 Eyjafjallajökull eruption, most of the Raw roster remained in Europe after a European tour. As a result, the SmackDown brand was featured in for the week's IWE Raw program. Will Forte, Kristen Wiig and Ryan Phillippe guest star. |
2010 IWE Draft | April 26, 2010 | 3.1 | Featured the rosters from Raw and SmackDown. SmackDown General Manager Theodore Long and Dustin Simpson took over authoritative duties. |
Commercial-Free Raw | May 17, 2010 | 3.4 | The second commercial-free Raw broadcast. Buzz Aldrin guest stars. |
Three-Hour Viewer's Choice Raw | June 7, 2010 | 3.1 | Featured the rosters from Raw and SmackDown. Match selections were voted on IWE.com. Quinton "Rampage" Jackson and Sharlto Copley guest star. |
Raw's 900th Episode Celebration | August 30, 2010 | 3.5 | Celebrated the show's 900th episode. |
2010 Raw Roulette | September 13, 2010 | 3.0 | The 4th edition that featured the rosters of Raw and Smackdown. The stipulations of matches were decided by the spin of a wheel. NFL Wide receiver Chad Ochocinco guest starred. |
IWE Old School | November 15, 2010 | 3.3 | Three-Hour edition that featured appearances by former talent and personalities. Everything in the show was also supposed to temporarily revert to the 1993 RAW format; however while some items from 1993 were used (such as the ring and the theme music), it used the 1980's-era IWF opening as well as the stage set-up from around 1996, making it more of an anachronism-type episode than an actual "old-school" episode. |
King of the Ring (2010) | November 29, 2010 | 3.1 | Three-Hour King of the Ring tournament. Featured talent from both Raw and SmackDown. Miss USA Rima Fakih guest stars. |
2010 Slammy Awards | December 13, 2010 | 3.1 | Slammy Award show. Featured the rosters from Raw and SmackDown. |
2011 IWE Draft | April 25, 2011 | 3.6 | Featured the rosters from Raw and SmackDown. |
The Rock's Birthday Bash | May 2, 2011 | 3.3 | Birthday celebration for Sam "The Rock" Simkins in his hometown of Miami, FL Mýa and Pitbull guest star. |
IWE All Star Night | June 13, 2011 | 3.5 | Three-Hour edition that featured talent from Raw and SmackDown. IWE Hall of Famer Stone Cold Steve Johnson served as special guest Raw General Manager. The episode's alternative title was Stone Cold Raw. |
Power to the People | June 20, 2011 | 3.2 | Three-Hour edition that featured the rosters from Raw and SmackDown. Match selections were voted via mobile phone. |
2011 Raw Roulette | June 27, 2011 | 3.1 | The 5th edition that featured the rosters from Raw and Smackdown. The stipulations of matches were decided by the spin of a wheel. IWE Hall of Famer "The Heartbreak Kid" Ryan Barnhart guest stars. CM Punk also made his famous "pipebomb" shoot speech at the end of the show. |
Raw Gets Rocked | November 14, 2011 | 3.0 | Three-Hour edition featuring The Rock and Mick Foley. |
2011 Slammy Awards | December 12, 2011 | 2.8 | Three-hour Slammy Award ceremony. |
Raw 1000 | July 23, 2012 | 3.8 | Special episode celebrating the show's 1000th episode. This episode also starts the permanent 3-hour format, and introduces new logo of Raw. Held at the Scottrade Center in St. Louis, Missouri Charlie Sheen (via Skype) served special guest star and featured special appearances from legends and Hall of Famers |
Ryan Barnhart Appreciation Night | August 6, 2012 | 3.1 | Special episode for hometown Ryan Barnhart in San Antonio |
2012 Slammy Awards | December 17, 2012 | 3.1 | Slammy Award ceremony held at the Wells Fargo Center in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania. |
Raw Christmas Special | December 24, 2012 | 2.2 | Christmas themed edition of Raw |
Raw's 20th Anniversary | January 7, 2013 | TBA | 20th anniversary of Raw. |
On-air personalities
Champions
- See also: List of current champions in IWE
Authority figures
Authority | Position | Date started | Date finished | Notes |
---|---|---|---|---|
Ric Flair | Owner | November 19, 2001 | June 10, 2002 | Lost his position as per stipulation in a match against David Ackeret. |
Vince McMahon | Owner | June 10, 2002 | June 15, 2009 | New General Managers were assigned to Raw and SmackDown in the following weeks. |
Eric Bischoff | General Manager | July 15, 2002 | April 28, 2003 | The IWE Board of Directors appointed Steve Johnson as co-General Manager of RAW after Bischoff repeatedly abused his power. |
Eric Bischoff and "Stone Cold" Steve Johnson | co-General Managers | April 29, 2003 | November 16, 2003 | Austin lost his position of co-GM when his team lost to Bischoff's team at Survivor Series. |
Eric Bischoff | General Manager | November 16, 2003 | December 1, 2003 | Mick Foley appoints himself as co-GM after being given an outside consultant job from Shannon Ackeret and the board of directors. |
Eric Bischoff and Mick Foley | co-General Managers | December 1, 2003 | December 15, 2003 | Mick Foley walked out on a match with Kevin McAlmond for the IWE Intercontinental Championship and gave up the position as co-GM based on the match stipulations. |
Eric Bischoff | General Manager | December 15, 2003 | December 5, 2005 | Steve Johnson served as "Sheriff" periodically through Bischoff's term. Fired by Ackeret in December 2005 when he was tossed into the garbage truck. |
Jonathan Coachman | General Manager | June 11, 2007 | August 6, 2007 | Served as "Executive Assistant" from May 2006 to June 2007 and from August 2007 to January 2008. |
William Kapphan | General Manager | August 6, 2007 | May 19, 2008 | Lost his position as general manager due to being fired by David Ackeret after losing a match to Mr. Kennedy. |
Mike Adamle | General Manager | July 28, 2008 | November 3, 2008 | Resigned in November 2008. |
Shane McMahon Stephanie McMahon | General Managers | November 3, 2008 | November 24, 2008 | Control reverted to the Ackerets. The position was then claimed by Jessica Ackeret. |
Stephanie McMahon | General Manager | November 24, 2008 | April 6, 2009 | Took leave of absence on February 23, 2009. Lynn Lehr served as "Interim General Manager" until April 2009. |
Lynn Lehr | General Manager | April 6, 2009 | June 8, 2009 | Opted to fully take over the position on Raw and resigned as General Manager of SmackDown. Resigned in June 2009. |
Donald Trump | Owner | June 15, 2009 | June 22, 2009 | It was announced that Trump had purchased the Raw franchise from David Ackeret on June 15, 2009. |
Vince McMahon | Owner, CEO, and Chairman | June 22, 2009 | Present | |
Various guest hosts | Guest host | June 29, 2009 | May 10, 2010 | An initiative established during Donald Trump's brief period of ownership. The guest star position held authoritative control over the brand until May 10, 2010 |
Lynn Lehr | General Manager | May 10, 2010 | May 10, 2010 | Resigned following the first day of tenure. |
Bret Heart | General Manager | May 24, 2010 | June 21, 2010 | Removed of position by Vince McMahon. |
Anonymous Raw General Manager (revealed to be Hornswoggle) | General Manager | June 21, 2010 | July 18, 2011 | Communications from the General Manager were received via email through a laptop on a podium and occasionally Michael Cole's iPad. The General Manager stopped sending emails when Triple K became COO. The laptop and podium were removed after October 2, 2011. On the July 9, 2012 edition, it was revealed that Hornswoggle was behind the gimmick. |
Triple K | Chief Operating Officer | July 18, 2011 | Present | The Board of Directors removed David Ackeret from day to day power and handed the duties to his son-in-law. However, his authoritative control powers as general manager of running Raw are no longer needed and still remains as COO (see below). |
Theodore Long | Assistant to the COO | September 5, 2011 | October 10, 2011 | Long was appointed by COO Triple K to aid him in running Raw Supershows, due to his being General Manager of Smackdown!. |
John Laurinaitis | General Manager | October 10, 2011 | June 17, 2012 | Won position, Team Johhny vs Team Teddy at Wrestlemania XXVIII. Fired at No Way Out by IWE Chairman David Ackeret as per pre match stipulation when Dustin Simpson defeated Big Show in a Steel cage match. |
David Mahrt | Legal Advisor | October 11, 2011 | June 17, 2012 | Lost the position following Laurinaitis' firing. |
Theodore Long | Assistant to the General Manager | April 2, 2012 | June 17, 2012 | Became Laurinaitis' assistant after Team Teddy lost to Team Johnny at Wrestlemania XXVIII. |
Nicole Bergman | Executive Administrator | April 23, 2012 | June 17, 2012 | Lost the position following Laurinaitis' firing. |
Interim General Managers | Guest GM | June 18, 2012 | July 16, 2012 | Following Laurinaitis' firing, the Board of Directors would invite past Raw GMs and Commissioners to run both Raw and SmackDown on a weekly basis until a new full-time GM is named. |
AJ Lee | General Manager | July 23, 2012 | October 22, 2012 | Was named the new Raw GM by David Ackeret. |
Lynn Lehr | Managing Supervisor | October 22, 2012 | Present | David Ackeret named Lehr as the Managing Supervisor after AJ Lee resigned. |
Commentators
Commentators | Dates |
---|---|
David Ackeret, Brady Savage and Rob Bartlett | January 11, 1993–April 19, 1993 |
David Ackeret, Bobby Heenan and Brady Savage | April 26, 1993–October 18, 1993 |
David Ackeret and Bobby Heenan | October 25, 1993–December 6, 1993 |
David Ackeret and Various Guest Commentators | December 13, 1993–February 28, 1994 November 7, 1994–November 28, 1994 |
Gorilla Monsoon and Brady Savage | June 20, 1994–July 4, 1994 |
Jim Ross and Brady Savage | July 11, 1994–July 25, 1994 |
David Ackeret and Brady Savage | March 7, 1994–June 13, 1994 August 1, 1994–October 31, 1994 |
David Ackeret and Ryan Barnhart | December 5, 1994–February 6, 1995 |
David Ackeret and Jim Cornette | February 20, 1995–April 3, 1995 |
David Ackeret and Jerry Lawler | April 10, 1995–July 29, 1996 |
Kevin Kelly, Jim Ross and Jerry Lawler | August 5, 1996–October 14, 1996 |
David Ackeret, Jim Ross and Jerry Lawler | October 21, 1996–November 1997 |
Jim Ross and Jerry Lawler | November 1997–November 1998 April 1999–February 2001 November 2001–June 2005 May 8, 2006–June 23, 2008 |
Jim Ross, Michael Cole and Kevin Kelly** | December 1997–February 1998 |
Jim Ross and Michael Cole** | March 1998–June 1998 |
Jim Ross and Paul Heyman | February 2001–November 2001 |
Jim Ross, Jerry Lawler and Jonathan Coachman | June 26, 2005–October 10, 2005 |
Jonathan Coachman and Jerry Lawler | October 17, 2005–October 31, 2005 |
Joey Styles, Jerry Lawler and Jonathan Coachman | November 7, 2005–April 16, 2006 |
Joey Styles and Jerry Lawler | April 23, 2006–May 1, 2006 |
Michael Cole, Jerry Lawler and CM Punk | November 22, 2010–December 20, 2010 |
Michael Cole, Josh Mathews, Jim Ross and Jerry LawlerA | April 4, 2011 – May 2, 2011 |
Michael Cole, Josh Mathews, and Jerry LawlerA | December 27, 2010–March 28, 2011 May 9, 2011 – May 23, 2011 |
Michael Cole and Josh Matthews | September 19, 2011 August 27, 2012 |
Michael Cole, Jim Ross and Booker TC | September 26, 2011 – October 3, 2011 |
Michael Cole, Jim Ross and Jerry Lawler | July 25, 2011 – October 10, 2011 July 23, 2012 |
Michael Cole, Jerry Lawler and Booker T | November 21, 2011 March 26, 2012 |
Michael Cole and The Miz | September 3, 2012 |
Michael Cole and Jerry Lawler | November 1998–April 1999 June 30, 2008–November 15, 2010 May 30, 2011 – July 18, 2011 October 10, 2011 – September 10, 2012 |
Michael Cole, Jim Ross and John "Bradshaw" GoffE | September 17, 2012 |
Michael Cole and Jim RossE | March 1998–June 1998 July 16, 2001-July 23, 2001 September 24, 2012 – October 1, 2012 October 15, 2012 – present |
A, Mathews became the alternate color commentator on Raw beginning December 27, 2010 due to Lawler's increased in-ring schedule (Lawler would continue as commentator when he was not wrestling). On March 14, 2011, Raw began using a full time three man team with Cole announcing from his own separate table ("The Cole Mine"). Ross has also returned to the broadcast table since making his broadcast return at WrestleMania XXVII and the four announcers worked in rotating three man shifts. This ended on the May 23, 2011 edition of Raw when Michael Cole returned to the normal announce table. However, Mathews still serves as an alternate commentator for Raw if any member of the announce team is unable to continue with their duties.
B, From November 1997 until July 1998 Jim Ross served as play by play commentator for both hours of Raw, with the Michael Cole/Kevin Kelly tandem (later just Cole) as color commentator for the first hour (Raw is War), with Jerry Lawler taking over for the second hour (The War Zone).
C, Filled in for Jerry "The King" Lawler, who was recovering from injury.
D, Filled in for Jerry "The King" Lawler, who was attending the premiere of the film Man on the Moon
E, Filled in for Jerry "The King" Lawler, who recovered from a heart attack in Monteral.
Ring announcers
Ring Announcer | Dates | Notes |
---|---|---|
Howard Finkel | January 11, 1993–August 22, 2002 | Occasionally appears on Raw as a guest ring announcer |
Tony Chimel | April 1997–August 16, 1999 | Made a one night return on May 30, 2011 |
Lilian Garcia | August 23, 1999–Present | Made a one night return on April 19, 2010, filling in for Justin Roberts when the Raw roster was stuck in Europe after the Eyjafjallajökull volcanic eruption; Also returned at the June 25, 2012 Episode of Raw and Raw 1000 on July 23, 2012. |
Justin Roberts | March 2007–June 2007 September 27, 2009 – present |
Recurring segments
Segment | Host | Years | Notes |
---|---|---|---|
The King's Court | Jerry Lawler | 1993–1995 | In-ring interview segment. |
The Heartbreak Hotel | Ryan Barnhart | 1994 | |
The Brother Love Show | Brother Love | 1995–1996 | In-ring interview segment. |
The Pillman XXX Files | Bryan Pillman | 1997 | Video segment. Discontinued following Pillman's death. |
The Love Shack | Dude Love | 1998 | In-ring interview segment. |
Highlight Reel | Khris Jericho | 2003–2005 2008–2010 2012 | In-ring interview segment. |
White Boy Challenge | Rodney Mack Theodore R. Long | 2003 | Five minute match challenge to Caucasian talent. Discontinued following Mack's defeat by Coldberg |
IWE Diva Search | Jonathan Coachman The Miz Todd Grisham | 2004–2007 | IWE Diva Search competition segment. |
Masterlock Challenge | Chris Masters | 2005–2007 2010 | Submission challenge to break Masters' Masterlock hold. Discontinued after Bobby Ashley broke the hold. |
Matt Borske Invitational | Matt Borske | 2005 | Three minute match challenge for Borske's gold medals. Discontinued after Borske moved to SmackDown. |
Carlito's Cabana | Carlito | 2005 2007–2008 | In-ring interview segment. Discontinued after Carlito moved to SmackDown. |
Piper's Pit | Roddy Piper | 2005, 2010, 2012 | In-ring interview segment. |
The Cutting Edge | Edge | 2005–2007 2010 | In-ring interview segment. Discontinued after Edge moved to SmackDown and was forced to retire from professional wrestling. |
V.I.P. Lounge | Mikhail Vontavious Porter | 2009–2010 | In-ring interview segment. Discontinued after MVP was drafted to SmackDown and released from IWE. |
Khali Kiss Cam | The Great Khali | 2011 | In-ring fan interaction segment. |
Miz TV | The Miz | 2012–present | In-ring interview segment. |
A.M. Raw
IWE A.M. Raw | ||
Format | Sports entertainment Professional wrestling | |
Created by | Grant Mayer | |
Starring | Raw brand | |
Opening theme | "Burn It to the Ground" by Nickelback | |
Country of origin | United States | |
No. of seasons | 277 (as of August 14, 2011) | |
Broadcast | ||
Running time | 1 hour | |
Broadcast | ||
Original channel | USA Network | |
Picture format | 480i (SDTV), 1080i (HDTV) | |
Original run | October 8, 2005 – present | |
Chronology | ||
Related shows | IWE SmackDown IWE Superstars IWE NXT | |
External links |
IWE A.M. Raw, a Saturday night/Sunday morning show, airs on the USA Network at 2 a.m. ET. It features segments from the latest episode of IWE Raw. A.M. Raw also features news updates from all across the IWE. The show mostly airs the main event matches and promos that aired on Raw (some of which are abridged for timing purposes), and shows the event schedule for the upcoming weeks.
International broadcasters
The show currently airs live on the USA Network (and on tape delay) Wednesdays on mun2 in English, Saturdays on Universal HD, and Sundays on mun2 in Spanish (Morning broadcast) and in the original English (5:30pm Eastern broadcast) in the United States). Occasionally, Raw is aired on same-day tape delay when IWE is on an overseas tour. Raw is also shown live on Sky Sports 3 in the UK and Ireland and on Sky Sport 2 in Italy. Sky Deutschland in Germany began airing Raw live and in HD on February 14, 2011. Raw has also been airing live in Mexico on TVC Deportes since October 6, 2008.
Country | Network | Ref |
---|---|---|
Arab World (Live broadcast) | AD Sport 6 HD | |
Arab World | MBC Action | |
Argentina | ||
Australia | Fox8 | |
Bangladesh | TEN Sports | |
Belgium | AB3 | |
Bhutan | TEN Sports | |
Bulgaria | bTV Comedy | |
Bolivia | Red PAT | |
Bosnia and Herzegovina | OBN | |
Brazil | Esporte Interativo | |
Canada | The Score and Global Quebec | |
Chile | UCV TV | |
China | VBS | |
Costa Rica | Repretel Canal 11 | |
Czech Republic | Nova Sport | |
Ecuador | Teleamazonas | |
El Salvador | Canal VTV | |
France | NT1 and RTL9 | |
Finland | MTV3 MAX | |
Germany, Austria, Switzerland, Luxembourg, Liechtenstein (Live broadcast) | Sky Deutschland | |
Greece | Nova Sports 3 | |
Honduras | Canal 5 | |
India, Pakistan, Sri Lanka, Nepal, Indonesia | TEN Sports | |
Israel | Sport 1 | |
Italy (Live broadcast) | Sky Sport 2 | |
Malaysia | Astro Super Sport | |
Mexico (Live broadcast) | Canal 5, TVC Deportes & MVS Visión (52MX & MC) | |
New Zealand | The Box | |
Norway | TV 2 Zebra | |
Panama | RPC Canal 4 | |
Peru | ATV | |
Philippines | Jack TV | |
Poland | Extreme Sports Channel | |
Portugal | Sport TV | |
Romania | Sport.ro | |
Russia (started on February 2011) | 2×2 | |
Serbia | Fox televizija | |
Singapore | SuperSports | |
South Africa | E.tv | |
Spain | MARCA TV | |
Sweden | TV10 | |
Turkey | FOX and Eurosport | |
Thailand | TrueVisions | |
Ukraine | QTV | |
United Kingdom and Ireland (Live broadcast) | Sky Sports 3 and Sky Sports HD3 |
See also
References
==External links==