American professional wrestling commentator
This article is about the WWE announcer. For the professional wrestler, whose real name is Michael Cole, see
Mikael Judas
. For other people, see
Michael Cole
.
Sean Michael Coulthard
(born December 8, 1966), better known by his
ring name
Michael Cole
, is an American
professional wrestling
commentator and journalist. He is currently signed to
WWE
, where he serves as the
play-by-play commentator
for the
Raw
brand and as the vice president of announcing since 2020.
Coulthard began his career in journalism in 1988 for
CBS Radio
before being hired by the then-World Wrestling Federation (WWF) in 1997 (WWF was renamed WWE in 2002). He has performed multiple on-screen hosting and commentary roles across his two-decade-plus-long career.
[3]
Early life and education
[
edit
]
Sean Michael Coulthard was born on December 8, 1966, in
Syracuse, New York
. He attended the
S.I. Newhouse School of Public Communications
at
Syracuse University
, graduating in 1988 with a B.A. in
broadcast journalism
.
[4]
[5]
Journalism career
[
edit
]
Coulthard began his career in the media as a journalist, working for
CBS Radio
. His first high-profile assignment was to cover the
1988 US presidential campaign
of
Democratic Party
nominee
Michael Dukakis
.
[6]
In 1992, he reported on the
presidential campaign
of
Bill Clinton
.
[6]
He also covered the
51-day siege at the Branch Davidian compound
in Waco, Texas, in 1993, and the following year, spent nine months covering the
Yugoslavian civil war
.
[6]
In 1995, he was also selected to cover the aftermath of the
Oklahoma City bombing
.
[6]
He returned to the
presidential campaign trail in 1996
to cover the campaigns of
Steve Forbes
and
Sen. Bob Dole
.
[6]
Professional wrestling career
[
edit
]
World Wrestling Federation/Entertainment/WWE (1997?present)
[
edit
]
Backstage interviewer and
Raw
(1997?1999)
[
edit
]
Coulthard came to the World Wrestling Federation in mid early-1997 after being recommended to company officials by
Todd Pettengill
, and started using the stage name "Michael Cole".
[7]
He provided voice-overs for promotional videos and later became the host of the
LiveWire show
. Cole first appeared on screen at the June 30, 1997 episode of
Raw is War
, interviewing
The Legion of Doom
and replaced Todd Pettengill as a backstage interviewer after SummerSlam.
[6]
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
in mid-1998. In December 1998, Cole became the regular play-by-play announcer for
Raw is War
, subbing for Jim Ross when Ross was ill with
Bell's palsy
. He continued in this role until
WrestleMania XV
in March 1999.
[6]
SmackDown!
(1999?2008)
[
edit
]
When the promotion's new
SmackDown!
television program debuted later that year, Cole was chosen to be the show's play-by-play announcer. His broadcast partner was originally Jerry Lawler, but when Lawler briefly left the WWF in 2001, he was replaced by Cole's
WWF Sunday Night Heat
broadcast partner
Tazz
shortly before the WWF vs. WCW/ECW
invasion storyline
.
[3]
[6]
After the WWE Brand Extension, Cole worked exclusively for the
SmackDown!
brand, cutting down to doing play-by-play on
SmackDown!
-only pay-per-views, while
Raw
-only pay-per-views were announced by Raw's announce team.
[6]
Cole was rarely involved in storylines; however, he has had minor roles in storylines involving
Heidenreich
,
Stephanie McMahon
,
Vito
, and
D-Generation X
(
Triple H
,
Shawn Michaels
,
Chyna
, and
Rick Rude
).
[3]
His 2004 angle with Heidenreich became infamous due to an implied scene where Heidenreich "Heidenraped" him in the arena restroom; in a 2008 interview, Heidenreich explained that the Cole rape angle was McMahon's idea and that
Pulp Fiction
came to mind when Stephanie McMahon approached him with the idea.
[8]
He called play-by-play at the
2006 Royal Rumble
match because Jim Ross, who had commentated the last two Royal Rumble matches with Tazz, had been (
kayfabe
) "fired" and replaced by former ECW play-by-play man
Joey Styles
, reuniting the original
SmackDown!
team of Cole and Jerry Lawler. On February 3, 2006, it was announced that Cole and Tazz were starting a radio show on Howard Stern's
Howard 100
on
Sirius Satellite Radio
, but the show was a trial run that only lasted a couple of weeks.
[9]
On the June 9 episode of
SmackDown!
, Cole's broadcast partner Tazz left
SmackDown!
to
ECW
, leaving Cole at that moment without a broadcast partner.
[10]
At
ECW One Night Stand
,
John "Bradshaw" Layfield
(JBL) announced he would replace Tazz as color commentator. This proved true five days later when JBL appeared on that week's episode of
SmackDown!
as Cole's new broadcast partner.
[3]
After JBL left the broadcast booth and returned to wrestling action on
Raw
,
Jonathan Coachman
became Cole's new partner on the January 4, 2008 episode of
SmackDown!
. Coachman was then replaced by
Mick Foley
beginning at
Backlash
on April 27, 2008.
[3]
Return to
Raw
(2008?2009)
[
edit
]
As a part of the
2008 WWE Draft
, Cole was drafted to the
Raw brand
as
Jim Ross
was drafted to the
SmackDown brand
, ending Cole's nearly 10-year run as a play-by-play commentator on
SmackDown
.
[11]
On the July 7, 2008 episode of
Raw
, Cole was attacked by
Kane
, who repeatedly asked Cole "Is he alive or dead?" before Cole was saved by Jerry Lawler.
[12]
Cole made his in-ring debut as Lawler's partner against the tag team of
Cody Rhodes and Ted DiBiase
; a match for the
World Tag Team Championship
. Cole and Lawler lost after Cole inadvertently tagged himself in, and was quickly pinned by Rhodes after a lariat.
[3]
At the
2009 Slammy Awards
, Cole won The "Oh My God" Moment of the Year award for vomiting on
Chris Jericho
at
SmackDown'
s 10th Anniversary show on October 2.
[13]
Heel turn and feud with Jerry Lawler (2010?2012)
[
edit
]
Cole was the lead commentator for
WWE NXT
for its first three seasons, and during the first season in 2010, Cole began showing signs of arrogance and cockiness towards face wrestlers and WWE fans alike, turning
heel
for the first time in his WWE career. He also began to belittle
Daniel Bryan
and took a liking to
The Miz
, leading to confrontations with Bryan throughout the season.
[14]
Meanwhile, on the Raw brand, Cole was made the official spokesman for the
Anonymous Raw General Manager
beginning on June 21, 2010.
[3]
Cole returned to
SmackDown
to join
Matt Striker
and
Todd Grisham
on commentary beginning on October 1, and branded himself the "Voice of the WWE", stating that he should be on all WWE shows going forward.
[15]
Cole showed particular over the top admiration for
The Miz
during his heel run. In particular Cole frequently praised his coaching abilities on NXT as well as praising his wrestling ability.
On the November 29, 2010 episode of
Raw
, Cole interfered in a Tables, Ladders, and Chairs match for the
WWE Championship
between Jerry Lawler and The Miz, costing Lawler the match and helping Miz retain his title.
[16]
This began a feud with Lawler that built towards a match at
WrestleMania XXVII
. During this time, Cole revealed
Jack Swagger
as his trainer and antagonized Lawler with antics such as making light of his mother's death and inviting his son
Brian Lawler
to air family secrets.
[3]
[14]
At WrestleMania, special referee
Stone Cold Steve Austin
announced Lawler won the match but the Anonymous Raw General Manager reversed the decision and declared Cole the winner by disqualification, due to Austin being involved in the match.
[17]
A month later at
Extreme Rules
, Cole teamed with Swagger to defeat Jim Ross and Lawler in a Country Whipping match.
[18]
Lawler and Cole had a final "Kiss My Foot" match at
Over the Limit
on May 22, which Cole lost; after the match,
Bret Hart
returned and put Cole in his signature submission move, the Sharpshooter, to help Lawler make Cole kiss his foot.
[19]
Cole apologized to Lawler the following night on
Raw
, ending their feud.
[20]
Cole continued to wrestle sporadically after this and still favored most heels while questioning the actions of the faces to regain control in matches. On the July 25 episode of
Raw
, Triple H placed Cole in a match against
Zack Ryder
, which Cole lost quickly.
[21]
Cole and
Alberto Del Rio
lost a tag team match to
John Cena
and Jim Ross on the October 17 episode of
Raw
, prompting Cole to challenge Ross to the "Michael Cole Challenge" (a series of three contests); Cole said that if Ross won each challenge, Cole would quit his job.
[22]
During the challenge on the November 14 episode of
Raw
, Ross won the first two challenges (arm wrestling and dancing), causing Cole to declare that the third contest was who weighed less, which Cole won. Ross was subsequently fired and
CM Punk
came out and attacked Cole; Cole vowed revenge and said he would sue Punk for injuring him.
[23]
Cole was a surprise entrant in the
2012 Royal Rumble
match but was quickly eliminated by Lawler,
Booker T
, and the returning
Kharma
.
[24]
Cole was put in a match with John Cena on the June 4, 2012, episode of
Raw
, which he lost, and was forced to make an apology for all of his wrongdoings.
[25]
On the July 9 episode of
Raw
, Cole was
booked
against Jerry Lawler in a WrestleMania XXVII rematch, which he quickly lost. The Anonymous Raw General Manager reversed the decision, making Cole the winner by disqualification following interference by Booker T, but then
Santino Marella
then came out and pulled out
Hornswoggle
from hiding underneath the ring, claiming that he was the Anonymous Raw General Manager.
[26]
Face turn (2012?present)
[
edit
]
Cole was lauded for his handling of his fellow commentary partner Jerry Lawler's
legitimate
on-air heart attack on the September 10, 2012 episode of
Raw
. Despite being a heel commentator for two years, Cole provided updates to television viewers on Lawler's condition throughout the episode and was described as "classy and professional".
[27]
He was also praised for his handling of the emergency, turning face as he began favoring the face wrestlers and began receiving cheers.
[14]
[28]
Cole also joined in commentary during
Raw
and pay-per-view events, including
Night of Champions
and
Hell in a Cell
by Jim Ross and John "Bradshaw" Layfield. Cole cemented his face turn when he hugged Lawler in the ring when Lawler returned on the November 12 episode of
Raw
.
[29]
On the March 30, 2015, episode of
Raw
, Cole, along with JBL and Booker T, was attacked by
Brock Lesnar
after
Seth Rollins
refused Lesnar his
WWE World Heavyweight Championship
rematch.
[30]
Cole did not appear on commentary the following week as part of a storyline injury. On June 8, Cole welcomed
Byron Saxton
as the color commentator for
Raw
, replacing Booker T.
[3]
On the January 15, 2018 episode of
Raw
, Cole was attacked by
Braun Strowman
due to Strowman's anger at being fired by
General manager
Kurt Angle
and was subsequently replaced by
Tom Phillips
for the remainder of the broadcast.
[31]
Three days later after
Raw
, on September 26, 2019, WWE announced as a part of their "WWE Premiere Week" that a new commentary team would be on
SmackDown
.
[32]
Cole returned to
SmackDown
as a full-time commentator for the first time in six years, appearing alongside former
Raw
commentators
Corey Graves
and
Renee Young
.
[33]
He was joined on commentary with
Pat McAfee
on April 16, 2021, and the two were universally praised for their chemistry, with Cole stating working with McAfee was the highlight of every week for him.
[34]
McAfee would take a break to work for ESPN's College Gameday, and Cole would be joined by
Wade Barrett
on commentary for
SmackDown
and for premium live events with Graves.
On August 5, 2023, WWE went with more on-air commentary changes as Cole returned to
Raw
on August 7, 2023, with
Wade Barrett
joining on commentary.
He remained on
SmackDown
as
Corey Graves
would be returning on commentary with
Kevin Patrick
joining in.
According to PWInsider, The changes of having Cole working both
Raw
and
SmackDown
on commentary were requested by WWE's future parent company
Endeavor
and its broadcast partners
USA Network
and
Fox
by having him as the face of the product.
[36]
On January 1, 2024, Cole left
SmackDown
again, leaving Patrick and Graves as the two-man commentary team.
[37]
From 2020 onwards, Cole has engaged in longstanding feuds on commentary against
Bayley
, with whom he has had issues in storyline over the past few years,
[38]
Top Dolla
, whom Cole called out for a botched top rope spot on an episode of
SmackDown
,
[39]
and
Dominik Mysterio
, whom Cole sides against in Dominik's feud with his father
Rey Mysterio
.
[40]
Reality of Wrestling (2013)
[
edit
]
In December 2013, Cole served as a special guest announcer for fellow WWE employee Booker T's professional wrestling promotion
Reality of Wrestling
, along with Rich Brennan (formerly known as Anthony Pratt and Rich Bocchini).
[41]
Legacy
[
edit
]
Arn Anderson
has praised Cole stating, "I think he does a very good job. I think he is very professional. He can call a wrestling match very well".
[42]
Legendary professional wrestling commentator, WWE Hall of Famer and former broadcast partner colleague
Jim Ross
has also praised Cole stating, "Michael works his ass off. He's a good family man, he's a company man, he works diligently to do his job. I respect him for all those things. I've always liked him, he's a good dude, and folks won't understand that. They only judge him for his television persona, rightly or wrongly. It's kind of frustrating".
[43]
Other media
[
edit
]
Cole has appeared as a commentator in numerous
WWE video games
, providing his voice. He has also appeared as a non-playable character in several and is a playable character in
WWF SmackDown! 2: Know Your Role
,
WWF No Mercy
as an unlockable character and
WWE '12
as a
downloadable
character.
[44]
[45]
Cole appeared on the September 12, 2012 episode of
Fox & Friends
to address fellow WWE commentator
Jerry Lawler
's heart attack that occurred during the September 10 live broadcast of
Raw
.
[46]
Personal life
[
edit
]
Coulthard has been married to Yolanda since 1987 and together they have two sons.
[
citation needed
]
He is a fan of the
New York Mets
,
[47]
New York Jets
, and
Boston Celtics
. After being joined on commentary by
Preston North End
supporter
Wade Barrett
, Cole was photographed alongside Barrett in a Preston kit and expressed his support for the team on
X
.
[48]
Filmography
[
edit
]
Film
[
edit
]
Web series
[
edit
]
Year
|
Title
|
Role
|
Notes
|
2012?2015
|
The JBL & Renee Show
|
Himself
|
Series regular (2012?2014), recurring (2014?2015)
|
2013?2016
|
Michael Cole's Weekly Sit-Down Interviews
|
Himself
|
Host
|
WWE Network
[
edit
]
Year
|
Title
|
Role
|
Notes
|
2016
|
WWE 24: Thank You Daniel
|
Himself
|
Guest
|
2016
|
WWE 24: WrestleMania Monday
|
Himself
|
Guest
|
Awards and accomplishments
[
edit
]
References
[
edit
]
- ^
"Michael Cole Considers when He'll Retire from WWE, Wants Another Run with Pat McAfee"
. May 3, 2023.
- ^
https://www.cagematch.net/?id=2&nr=1125
- ^
a
b
c
d
e
f
g
h
i
"Michael Cole profile"
.
Online World of Wrestling
. Retrieved
August 6,
2022
.
- ^
Davis, Lynsey (May 12, 2020).
"51 Days: An Insider's Look at the Waco Siege"
.
Recoil
. Retrieved
May 5,
2023
.
- ^
Boccacino, John.
"Three passionate alumni play key roles in success of WWE"
.
Syracuse University Alumni Association
. Retrieved
May 5,
2023
.
- ^
a
b
c
d
e
f
g
h
i
"Michael Cole bio on USA Network"
.
USA Network
. Archived from
the original
on December 18, 2008
. Retrieved
July 8,
2008
.
- ^
Melok, Bobby (October 16, 2012).
"Where Are They Now?: Todd Pettengill"
. WWE.com
. Retrieved
April 8,
2013
.
- ^
"Jon Heidenreich discusses his "Heidenrape" angle with Michael Cole and says it was inspired by Vince McMahon's dream"
.
Pro Wrestling Dot Net
. August 2, 2008
. Retrieved
August 6,
2022
.
- ^
"Tazz And Michael Cole Get Sirius Show"
.
Inside Pro Wrestling
. February 2, 2006
. Retrieved
August 6,
2022
.
- ^
Martin, Adam (June 9, 2006).
"SmackDown Results - 6/9/06 - Wheeling, WV (Rey Mysterio - Finlay)"
.
Wrestleview
. Retrieved
August 6,
2022
.
- ^
Clark, Ryan (June 23, 2008).
"Full 2008 WWE Draft Results Inside Here, More"
.
Wrestling Inc
. Retrieved
August 6,
2022
.
- ^
Golden, Hunter (July 7, 2008).
"Raw Results - 7/7/08 - New Orleans, LA (New #1 Contender, & more)"
.
Wrestleview
. Retrieved
August 6,
2022
.
- ^
Martin, Adam (December 15, 2009).
"Full list of 2009 Slammy Award winners"
.
Wrestleview
. Retrieved
August 6,
2022
.
- ^
a
b
c
Konuwa, Alfred (August 2, 2013).
"WWE's Best There Never Was: Heel Michael Cole Went Too Soon"
.
Bleacher Report
. Retrieved
August 7,
2022
.
- ^
Nemer, Paul (October 1, 2010).
"Smackdown Results ? 10/1/10"
.
Wrestleview
. Retrieved
August 7,
2022
.
- ^
Nemer, Paul (November 29, 2010).
"Raw Results ? 11/29/10"
.
Wrestleview
. Retrieved
August 7,
2022
.
- ^
Adkins, Greg (March 9, 2011).
"Michael Cole def. Jerry "The King" Lawler"
.
WWE
. Retrieved
August 7,
2022
.
- ^
"Michael Cole & Jack Swagger def. Jim Ross & Jerry Lawler (Country Whipping Match)"
.
WWE
. Retrieved
May 2,
2011
.
- ^
Caldwell, James (May 22, 2011).
"Caldwell's WWE Over the Limit PPV Results 5/22: Ongoing "virtual-time" coverage of live PPV ? Cena vs. Miz I Quit, Orton vs. Christian, Cole vs. Lawler"
. PWTorch
. Retrieved
June 19,
2011
.
- ^
Nemer, Paul (May 23, 2011).
"Raw Results ? 5/23/11"
.
Wrestleview
. Retrieved
August 7,
2022
.
- ^
Nemer, Paul (July 25, 2011).
"Raw Results ? 7/25/11"
.
Wrestleview
. Retrieved
August 7,
2022
.
- ^
Nemer, Paul (October 17, 2011).
"Raw Results ? 10/17/11"
.
- ^
Nemer, Paul (November 14, 2011).
"Raw Results ? 11/14/11"
.
Wrestleview
. Retrieved
August 7,
2022
.
- ^
Caldwell, James.
"Caldwell's WWE Royal Rumble report 1/29: Ongoing "virtual time" coverage of live PPV ? Rumble match, Punk-Ziggler, Cena-Kane, steel cage"
.
Pro Wrestling Torch
. Retrieved
January 30,
2012
.
- ^
Martin, Adam (June 4, 2012).
"Raw Results ? 6/4/12"
.
Wrestleview
. Retrieved
August 7,
2022
.
- ^
Benigno, Anthony (December 1, 2014).
"The Anonymous Raw General Manager returned"
. WWE
. Retrieved
March 15,
2015
.
- ^
Mitchell, Houston (September 11, 2012).
"Jerry Lawler suffers heart attack during live 'Monday Night Raw'
"
.
Los Angeles Times
. Retrieved
April 8,
2013
.
- ^
Caldwell, James (April 3, 2013).
"WWE NEWS: Cole acknowledges heel run went too long, says "voice of reason" was missing, details WWE's decision to turn him face post-Lawler heart attack"
.
Pro Wrestling Torch
. Retrieved
August 6,
2022
.
- ^
Caldwell, James (November 12, 2012).
"Caldwell's WWE Raw Results 11/12: Complete "virtual-time" coverage of live Raw - Lawler returns, Cena-Punk, final PPV hype"
. Pro Wrestling Torch
. Retrieved
March 15,
2015
.
- ^
Paglino, Nick (March 30, 2015).
"WWE Provides Storyline Update on Michael Cole's Injury, Rock Talks Ronda Rousey, Notable Names Attend Raw"
.
Wrestlezone
. Retrieved
March 30,
2015
.
- ^
Tedesco, Mike (January 15, 2018).
"WWE RAW Results ? 1/15/18 (Asuka vs. Nia Jax, Royal Rumble hype in San Antonio)"
.
Wrestleview
. Retrieved
August 7,
2022
.
- ^
Tedesco, Mike (September 26, 2019).
"Commentary team changes announced for Raw and SmackDown ahead of "Premiere Week"
"
.
Wrestleview
. Retrieved
August 7,
2022
.
- ^
"WWE Premiere Week features unprecedented eight hours of primetime coverage"
.
- ^
"Pat McAfee joins Friday Night SmackDown announce team"
.
WWE
. April 16, 2021
. Retrieved
August 7,
2022
.
- ^
"Michael Cole Will Become 'The Face' of WWE's Product Going Forward"
. August 5, 2023.
- ^
"WWE Changing The SmackDown Commentary Team"
.
PWMania.com
. January 1, 2024
. Retrieved
January 1,
2024
.
- ^
Breisch, Matty (June 14, 2023).
"Bayley is already getting sick of Michael Cole on SmackDown"
.
ClutchPoints
. Retrieved
August 20,
2023
.
- ^
Adamson, Dave (April 20, 2023).
"WWE Star Hilariously Heats up 'Feud' with Michael Cole"
.
WrestleTalk
. Retrieved
August 20,
2023
.
- ^
Black, Matt (April 22, 2023).
"Watch: Michael Cole gets hysterical watching Dominik Mysterio attack on SmackDown"
.
Sportskeeda
. Retrieved
August 20,
2023
.
- ^
"Reality of Wrestling ? Christmas Chaos 8"
. Archived from
the original
on January 28, 2014
. Retrieved
January 28,
2014
.
- ^
Sachdeva, Shiven (July 21, 2020).
"Arn Anderson gives details on Michael Cole being screamed at and cussed out; talks about the pressure on him"
.
Sportskeeda
. Retrieved
August 7,
2022
.
- ^
Fannin, Pat (April 3, 2018).
"Jim Ross Defends Michael Cole Against Fan Criticism"
.
Fightful
. Retrieved
August 7,
2022
.
- ^
Melok, Bobby (January 10, 2012).
"Cole in "WWE '12": The pleasure's all yours"
.
WWE
. Archived from
the original
on January 14, 2012
. Retrieved
July 6,
2023
.
- ^
"Michael Coulthard profile"
.
Behind The Voice Actors
. Retrieved
August 7,
2022
.
- ^
"WWE News: Michael Cole Tweets Update and Sends Message to Fans from Lawler"
.
Bleacher Report
. September 12, 2012
. Retrieved
August 7,
2022
.
- ^
Mcafee, Pat.
"?? Michael Cole Mets Fan"
.
Youtube
.
- ^
@StuBennett (August 30, 2023).
"I told the voice of @WWE (and recent convert to the beautiful game) @MichaelCole he could pick any soccer ?? team in England to support. Any at all. His response"
(
Tweet
) – via
Twitter
.
- ^
Eck, Kevin (February 14, 2011).
"2010 Awards"
.
The Baltimore Sun
. Retrieved
September 25,
2020
.
- ^
a
b
Meltzer, Dave
(January 30, 2012). "Jan 30 Wrestling Observer Newsletter: Gigantic year-end awards issue, best and worst in all categories plus UFC on FX 1, death of Savannah Jack, ratings, tons and tons of news".
Wrestling Observer Newsletter
. Campbell, CA.
ISSN
1083-9593
.
- ^
Meltzer, Dave
(January 23, 2013).
"The 2012 Wrestling Observer Newsletter Annual Awards Issue"
.
Wrestling Observer Newsletter
.
Campbell, California
.
ISSN
1083-9593
.
- ^
Meltzer, Dave.
"March 1, 2021, Wrestling Observer Newsletter 2020 awards issue, Elimination Chamber"
.
Figure4Weekly
. Wrestling Observer Newsletter
. Retrieved
February 26,
2021
.
- ^
"2011 Gooker Award"
.
wrestlecrap.freepolls.com
. Retrieved
June 6,
2018
.
External links
[
edit
]
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Executive
personnel
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See also
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