Mauro Ranallo

Mauro Ranallo
Birth name Mauro Domenico Ranallo
Born (1969-12-21) December 21, 1969
Abbotsford, British Columbia, Canada
Website www.mauroranallo.com
Professional wrestling career
Ring name(s) Mauro Ranallo
Billed height 5 ft 9 in (1.75 m)
Debut 1986

Mauro Domenico Ranallo (born December 21, 1969) is a Canadian sports announcer and commentator, currently signed to WWE. He began announcing when he was 16 years old and is notable for his dramatic style, which involves heavy use of metaphor, puns, and advanced vocabulary. He has experience in Canadian football, ice hockey, professional wrestling, boxing, kickboxing, and mixed martial arts events.

Ranallo is best known for his work as a commentator for Pride Fighting Championships and, more recently, Showtime for Elite XC, Strikeforce, Showtime Championship Boxing, and New Japan Pro Wrestling on AXS TV broadcasts. He is currently signed with WWE as the lead SmackDown announcer in January 2016, coinciding with the show's move to the USA Network.

Ranallo has bipolar disorder.[1]

Early life

Ranallo was born in Abbotsford, British Columbia, the eldest of three sons born to an Italian couple who immigrated to Canada. He has been a fan of professional wrestling since the age of five.[2] He graduated from WJ Mouat Secondary School in Abbotsford.

Career

Commentator

Ranallo began his career as an announcer and manager at the age of 16, when he was offered a job with All-Star Wrestling (in Vancouver), a nationally televised wrestling show throughout Canada. After that program ended production and the promotion folded in 1989, Ranallo became a disc jockey for Abbotsford, British Columbia radio station CFVR (now CKQC-FM). Later, he provided commentary announcing duties for Muay Thai/Kickboxing events and King of the Cage mixed martial arts shows on TSN.[3]

From 1999 to 2000, he served as the commentator for the Stampede Wrestling TV show in Calgary. His color-commentator was the late Bad News Allen. Ranallo was also the commentator for KVOS-TV's Top Ranked Wrestling for most of that program's run in 2005–06.

He became most prominently known among MMA fans as the voice of Pride Fighting Championships PPV broadcasts in North America from 2003 until October 2006. He was initially paired with friend, longtime-PRIDE commentator, and MMA legend Bas Rutten. After Rutten departed the broadcast, Bas was replaced by Frank Trigg. Ranallo continued to commentate on MMA as part of the EliteXC and ShoXC broadcast team from 2006 until their closure in October 2008. Ranallo continued to be the voice of MMA on Showtime by becoming the mainstay of the commentary team for Strikeforce until that organisation's acquisition and eventual merger with the Ultimate Fighting Championship in 2013. He was also the lead announcer of the Muay Thai Premier League (a global combat sports league featuring the fighting arts of Muay Thai).

Ranallo continues to work as a broadcaster for Showtime Networks, and provides commentary for three major combat sports: Showtime Championship Boxing,[4] Glory Kickboxing,[5] and Invicta Fighting Championships MMA. In 2015 he returned to his pro-wrestling roots when he became the voice of New Japan Pro Wrestling in the U.S. alongside MMA legend and former NJPW wrestler Josh Barnett.[6] Ranallo signed a contract to WWE on December 15, 2015, and made his WWE debut as the lead play-by-play commentator for the SmackDown broadcast team for its premiere on USA Network on January 7, 2016, thus being dubbed "The Voice of SmackDown".[7][8] Ranallo's commentary was highly praised by fans and critics alike, who claimed he "brought back seriousness" into the commentary team, unlike WWE Raw's and was described as "the best announcer since Jim Ross".

Television and internet radio host

In 2006, he was lead news anchor for the Canadian combat sports channel The Fight Network and featured on "Fight Network Radio" through Sirius Hardcore Sports Radio Channel 98. From January 2009 until 2011, he hosted "The MMA Show" weekly on The Score and the show was also available as a podcast. Ranallo was also one of three analysts on The Score's show "Right After Wrestling", now called "Aftermath", which airs after The Score's airing of WWE SmackDown and the replay of WWE Raw.[9] Following the demise of the MMA Show and leaving The Score, Ranallo hosted "The Show with Mauro Ranallo" Podcast, which was similar to his previous show, though this podcast also became defunct in 2012.

Other work

Ranallo was a member of the rankings committee for the World Alliance of Mixed Martial Arts (WAMMA) until the organization's demise in 2009.

Awards

In wrestling

References

  1. Santoliquito, Joseph (November 18, 2015). "Mauro Ranallo: Battling a Stigma". Sherdog. Retrieved March 26, 2016.
  2. "Bio". Mauro Ranallo. Retrieved 2016-03-09.
  3. Yahoo! (2006-08-10). "Mauro Ranallo Joins The Fight Network". Biz.yahoo.com.
  4. "Mauro Ranallo To Host & Mark 'Too Sharp' Johnson To Serve As Guest Analyst for Matthysse vs. Olusegun telecast on Saturday". Boxingnews24.com. 2012-09-06. Retrieved 2016-03-09.
  5. "GLORY 11 adds Mauro Ranallo and Duke Roufus to Spike TV debut on Oct. 12 in Chicago". MMAmania.com. 2013-10-09. Retrieved 2016-03-09.
  6. "Mauro Ranallo returning to his wrestling roots with New Japan Pro Wrestling | WWE". Sporting News. Retrieved 2016-03-09.
  7. Wagenheim, Jeff (2015-11-29). "Why the Golden State Warriors need more nationally televised games". SI.com. Retrieved 2016-03-09.
  8. "WWE hires Mauro Ranallo for Smackdown announcing role & more". F4wonline.com. 2015-12-13. Retrieved 2016-03-09.
  9. Meltzer, Dave (January 25, 2016). "January 25, 2016 Wrestling Observer Newsletter: 2015 Observer Awards Issue". Wrestling Observer Newsletter (Campbell, California): 32. ISSN 1083-9593.

External links

Preceded by
Rich Brennan
SmackDown Lead Announcer
2016-present
Succeeded by
Current
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