Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
The balance beam and wire bridge from the televised series course were not used. Fox, Rocket, Khan, Wolf, Falcon, Vogue, Saracen and Hunter took part in the shows, despite Rocket and Khan not appearing in the 1998 series, and the Gladiators (except Hunter) not having had chance to play Pursuit in the televised series.
Michael Van Wijk (born 30 September 1952) is an English bodybuilder, professional sportsperson, actor and TV presenter. He is most well known for his role as Wolf on English TV endurance sports game show Gladiators, a role he held for all its eight series (1992–2000).
James Hunter Crossley (born 12 June 1973) [1] is an English bodybuilder, television personality and musician. He appeared as Hunter in the sports entertainment series Gladiators from 1993 to 2000. He currently runs a sound healing teacher training school in SW London [ 2 ]
Originally advertised as Gladiators: G-Force, this short ten-minute programme profiled a selection of the Gladiators, including Spartan, Panther and Atlas. Interviews were conducted by Gladiators from the original series, Diane Youdale ("Jet") and James Crossley ("Hunter"). A two-minute profile of Oblivion, not previously shown, appeared as ...
She left the Gladiators in 1996 after sustaining a neck injury on the show. She later said that she did not want to risk a more serious injury. [6] She then co-hosted the final original series of Finders Keepers with Neil Buchanan in 1996, and in the same year, was the hostess on You Bet!, with Darren Day. [4]
Gladiators is a sports entertainment television show that was first broadcast in the United States and was an international success during the 1990s and early 2000s.. The concept of the show is that athletic members of the public battle against the show's own Gladiators (often semi-professional or ex-athletes) to claim points in several events that require speed, strength and skill.
John Anderson was born in Glasgow, Scotland, on 28 November 1931. [4] Anderson had a successful career long before his athletics and TV fame. Plaudits included representing Scotland as a schoolboy footballer, becoming the first home Scot to gain the prestigious Full FA Coaching Certificate (then only four were awarded per year), being one of only two confirmed recipients (along with Wilf Paish ...
Seru was trained by father and son Boris and Dean Malenko at the renowned Malenko Wrestling Academy in Tampa, Florida, USA (1994). He is best known as "Vulcan" in the Australian version of TV series Gladiators, [3] as well as joining the British Gladiators team in Seasons 7 and 8.