Michael Cole
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| Michael Sean Coulthard |
|
|---|---|
| Statistics | |
| Ring name(s) | Michael Cole |
| Billed height | 5 ft 7 in (1.70 m) |
| Billed weight | 176 lb (80 kg) |
| Born | December 8, 1968 Syracuse, New York |
| Resides | Amenia, New York |
| Debut | 1997 |
Michael Sean Coulthard[citation needed] (born December 8, 1968)[citation needed] better known by his stage name Michael Cole, is an American former news journalist and the current play-by-play announcer for World Wrestling Entertainment's Friday Night SmackDown!.
WWF/WWE career
Coulthard came to the World Wrestling Federation in 1997 and started using the stage name "Michael Cole." He became the host of the old LiveWire show alongside Jim Cornette and a backstage interviewer. In late 1997, Cole became one of the three announcers for the first hour of Monday Night RAW, alongside Jim Ross and Kevin Kelly. Eventually Cole was permanently replaced by Jerry Lawler later in the year. In 1999, Cole became the regular play-by-play announcer for Monday Night RAW subbing for Jim Ross when Ross became stricken with an episode of Bell's palsy. When the promotion's new SmackDown! television program debuted later that year, Cole was chosen to be the show's play-by-play announcer. Originally his broadcast partner was Jerry "The King" Lawler, but when Lawler briefly left the WWF, he was replaced by Cole's Heat broadcast partner Tazz shortly before the WWF vs. WCW/ECW invasion storyline. Cole also had a stint doing commentary on SmackDown!'s former sister show WWE Velocity.
As announcer, Cole was rarely involved in storylines; however, he has had minor roles in storylines involving Stone Cold Steve Austin, John Cena, Heidenreich, Stephanie McMahon and D-Generation X (Triple H, Shawn Michaels, Chyna, and Rick Rude). His most recent angle involved getting kissed by Vito. He also appeared in the Taxi Driver parody trailer in promotion of WrestleMania 21.
Cole called play-by-play at the 2006 Royal Rumble match because Ross, who had commentated the last three Royal Rumble matches with Tazz, had been "fired" in the storylines and replaced by former ECW play-by-play man Joey Styles, reuniting the original SmackDown! team of Cole and Lawler.
On February 3, 2006, it was announced that he and Tazz were starting a radio show on Howard Stern's "Howard 101" radio station on Sirius, airing Thursday through Sunday at 8 pm, but the show was a trial run that only lasted a couple of weeks.
On April 26, 2006, WWE announced that Cole would become the Managing Editor of WWE.com. Shortly after, WWE Chairman Vince McMahon told shareholders in a meeting held on September 14 that he believes that the website "sucks". In response, Cole replied on WWE.com about updated content for the website: a broadband network with original web-only shows have been scheduled for October, with a new mobile offering, a re-vamped subscription site and more exclusive videos and photos. Cole went on to say, "So in summary, the web site does suck, compared to where we are going to take it, but it won’t suck for long. Wish I could say the same for the boss." Whether Cole's final comment about McMahon was either kayfabe or legit is unclear.[1]
On the June 9 edition of SmackDown!, Cole's broadcast partner Tazz left Smackdown! for ECW, leaving Cole at that moment without a broadcast partner. At ECW One Night Stand 2006, John "Bradshaw" Layfield announced he would replace Tazz as color commentator. This proved true five days later when he appeared on that weeks edition of SmackDown! as Cole's new broadcast partner.
Job Titles
- WWE SmackDown! play-by-play commentator
- Former WWE Monday Night RAW commentator
External links
Categories: Articles lacking sources from January 2007 | All articles lacking sources | All articles with unsourced statements | Articles with unsourced statements since December 2007 | 1968 births | Living people | American journalists | Scottish-Americans | People from Syracuse, New York | People from the Catskills | Professional wrestling announcers | Reporters and correspondents | Syracuse University alumni | The Attitude Era