Where Can I Download Wwe Ppvs
Watch WWE NXT 11/8/17 - 8th November 2017 - 8/11/2017 Full Show Online Free DAILYMOTION VIDEOS (HD QUALITY)DAILYMOTION VIDEOS (HD QUALITY)OPENLOAD VIDEOS (HD QUALITY. Top 10 wrestlers with the most PPV matches (as of Clash of Champions 2017). Rank, Wrestler, No. Of PPV matches, First PPV match, Last PPV match. 1, Kane, 171, 1995, 2017. 2, The Undertaker, 166, 1990, 2017. 3, Triple H, 165, 1995, 2017. 4, John Cena, 154, 2002, 2017.
This is a list of WWE pay-per-view and WWE Network events, detailing all professional wrestling cards promoted on pay-per-view (PPV) and the WWE Network by WWE.
WWE has been broadcasting PPV events since the 1980s, when its classic 'Big Four' events (Royal Rumble, WrestleMania, SummerSlam, and Survivor Series) were first established. The company's PPV lineup expanded to a monthly basis in the mid-1990s before expanding even further in the early-2000s. Aside from its standard monthly schedule, WWE produced additional international PPVs between 1997 and 2003. These events were not available in the United States and coincided with overseas tours in the United Kingdom. Following WWE's original brand extension in 2002, the company promoted two touring rosters representing its Raw and SmackDown television programs. The traditional 'Big Four' continued to showcase the entire roster, while the remaining PPV events alternated between Raw and SmackDown cards. A special ECW PPV in 2005 led to the creation of an ECW brand in 2006, which also received its own dedicated PPV events. In March 2007, WWE announced that all subsequent PPV events would feature performers from all brands.[1] In 2008, all WWE PPV events began broadcasting in high-definition.
The company's PPV business began to drastically change with the launch of the WWE Network on February 24, 2014. While most of the WWE events still air in many parts of the world on traditional PPV channels, WWE's focus has shifted away from delivering their events on PPV channels. Their main focus now is delivering all of the events on the WWE Network, including some that are exclusively on the Network. WWE has pushed the Network's launching price of US$9.99 monthly[2] as a way to lure potential customers away from traditional PPV which, on average, costs five to six times as much (in the United States) as the Network. The WWE Network also features the back catalog of WWE, WCW, and ECW PPV events, as well as all WWE Network exclusive events from NXT Arrival onwards in their on-demand section. All WWE Network events that have aired since the launch of the Network have been broadcast in high-definition.[3] Since the second brand extension in July 2016, brand-exclusive PPVs returned with only the 'Big Four' as the only PPVs to feature both Raw and SmackDown brands. Just like the previous brand extension, brand exclusive PPVs ended after WrestleMania 34.[4]
In addition to the WWE Network, WWE PPVs are still made available on traditional PPV outlets in the United States by In Demand. In Canada, WWE PPVs are available through (depending on service provider) Vu!, Shaw PPV, or SaskTel PPV, and can be seen in movie theatres in HD through selected locations of the Cineplex Entertainment chain. In Australia, WWE's pay-per-views are shown on Main Event. In the United Kingdom and Ireland, some PPVs are shown on Sky Sports 1 & 3 and others on Sky Sports Box Office. In India and South Asia, a single broadcaster (currently Sony TEN) generally holds the rights to all WWE programming,[5] including PPVs, and they are broadcast for no additional charge.[6]
Currently, WWE PPV events are typically 3½ hours to 4 hours in length, while WWE's WrestleMania events are approximately 5 to 5½ hours in length. WWE airs a pre-show before most Network events known as the Kickoff show. Each Kickoff show includes matches, interviews, and a panel of experts previewing the upcoming line-up. The Kickoff pre-show began as a 30-minute show[7] before expanding to 1 hour, beginning with Night of Champions in September 2014.[8] The 'Big Four' Kickoff shows are the longest, at 2 hours.[9] WWE occasionally airs a post-show after some Network events. Originally known as Fallout, and later known as Raw Talk and Talking Smack during the brand-only events, each post-show includes interviews and a panel of experts analyzing the event. The post-shows vary in length.[10]
The NXT TakeOver events began at 2 hours in length before expanding to 2½ hours, beginning with TakeOver: Brooklyn in 2015, and sometimes 3 hours, beginning with TakeOver: New Orleans in 2018. Each TakeOver pre-show includes interviews and a panel of experts previewing the upcoming line-up. The TakeOver pre-shows are typically 30 minutes in length while some have been 1 hour, beginning with TakeOver: San Antonio in 2017.[11] WWE also occasionally aired a post-show after TakeOver events known as TakeOver Fallout. Each TakeOver Fallout included interviews and a panel of experts analyzing the event. The Fallout post-shows varied in length.
- 1Past events
- 1.11980s
- 1.21990s
- 1.32000s
- 1.42010s
- 2Upcoming event schedule
Past events[edit]
1980s[edit]
1985[edit]
| Date | Event | Venue | Location | Main event |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| March 31 | WrestleMania | Madison Square Garden | New York, New York | Hulk Hogan and Mr. T vs. Roddy Piper and Paul Orndorff[12] |
| November 7 | The Wrestling Classic | Rosemont Horizon | Rosemont, Illinois | Junkyard Dog vs. Randy Savage[13] |
1986[edit]
| Date | Event | Venue | Location | Main event |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| April 7 | WrestleMania 2 | Nassau Veterans Memorial Coliseum | Uniondale, New York | Mr. T vs. Roddy Piper |
| Rosemont Horizon | Rosemont, Illinois | The Dream Team (Greg Valentine and Brutus Beefcake) vs. The British Bulldogs (Davey Boy Smith and Dynamite Kid) for the WWF Tag Team Championship | ||
| Los Angeles Memorial Sports Arena | Los Angeles, California | Hulk Hogan vs. King Kong Bundy for the WWF World Heavyweight Championship |
- WrestleMania 2 was billed as one show, but was staged at three locations. Each match is listed as the main event for that venue's card. Hulk Hogan vs. King Kong Bundy was billed as the official main event.
1987[edit]
| Date | Event | Venue | Location | Main event |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| March 29 | WrestleMania III | Pontiac Silverdome | Pontiac, Michigan | Hulk Hogan vs. André the Giant for the WWF World Heavyweight Championship |
| November 26 | Survivor Series | Richfield Coliseum | Richfield Township, Ohio | Hulk Hogan, Paul Orndorff, Don Muraco, Ken Patera and Bam Bam Bigelow vs. André the Giant, One Man Gang, King Kong Bundy, Rick Rude and Butch Reed |
1988[edit]
| Date | Event | Venue | Location | Main event |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| March 27 | WrestleMania IV | Atlantic City Convention Hall | Atlantic City, New Jersey | Randy Savage vs. Ted DiBiase for the vacant WWF World Heavyweight Championship |
| August 29 | SummerSlam | Madison Square Garden | New York, New York | The Mega Powers (Randy Savage and Hulk Hogan) vs. The Mega Bucks (Ted DiBiase and André the Giant) |
| November 24 | Survivor Series | Coliseum at Richfield | Richfield Township, Ohio | Randy Savage, Hulk Hogan, Hercules, Koko B. Ware and Hillbilly Jim vs. Big Boss Man, Akeem, Ted DiBiase, Haku and The Red Rooster |
1989[edit]
| Date | Event | Venue | Location | Main event |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| January 15 | Royal Rumble | The Summit | Houston, Texas | 30-man Royal Rumble match |
| April 2 | WrestleMania V | Atlantic City Convention Hall | Atlantic City, New Jersey | Randy Savage vs. Hulk Hogan for the WWF World Heavyweight Championship |
| August 28 | SummerSlam | Brendan Byrne Arena | East Rutherford, New Jersey | Hulk Hogan and Brutus Beefcake vs. Randy Savage and Zeus |
| November 23 | Survivor Series | Rosemont Horizon | Rosemont, Illinois | The Ultimate Warriors (The Ultimate Warrior, Jim Neidhart and [[The Rockers]] (Shawn Michaels and Marty Jannetty)) vs. The Heenan Family (Andre The Giant, Haku , Arn Anderson and Bobby Heenan) |
| December 12 Air date December 27 | No Holds Barred | Nashville Municipal Auditorium | Nashville, Tennessee | Hulk Hogan and Brutus Beefcake vs. Randy Savage and Zeus |
1990s[edit]
1990[edit]
| Date | Event | Venue | Location | Main event |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| January 21 | Royal Rumble | Orlando Arena | Orlando, Florida | 30-man Royal Rumble match |
| April 1 | WrestleMania VI | SkyDome | Toronto, Ontario, Canada | Hulk Hogan vs. The Ultimate Warrior for the WWF World Heavyweight Championship and the WWF Intercontinental Championship |
| August 27 | SummerSlam | Spectrum | Philadelphia, Pennsylvania | The Ultimate Warrior vs. Rick Rude for the WWF World Heavyweight Championship |
| November 22 | Survivor Series | Hartford Civic Center | Hartford, Connecticut | The Ultimate Warrior, Hulk Hogan and Tito Santana vs. Ted DiBiase, Rick Martel, The Warlord and Power and Glory (Hercules and Paul Roma) |
1991[edit]
| Date | Event | Venue | Location | Main event |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| January 19 | Royal Rumble | Miami Arena | Miami, Florida | 30-man Royal Rumble match |
| March 24 | WrestleMania VII | Los Angeles Memorial Sports Arena | Los Angeles, California | Sgt. Slaughter vs. Hulk Hogan for the WWF World Heavyweight Championship |
| August 26 | SummerSlam | Madison Square Garden | New York, New York | Hulk Hogan and The Ultimate Warrior vs. Sgt. Slaughter, General Adnan and Col. Mustafa |
| November 27 | Survivor Series | Joe Louis Arena | Detroit, Michigan | Big Boss Man and The Legion Of Doom (Hawk and Animal) vs. Irwin R. Schyster and The Natural Disasters (Earthquake and Typhoon) |
| December 3 | This Tuesday in Texas | Freeman Coliseum | San Antonio, Texas | The Undertaker vs. Hulk Hogan for the WWF World Heavyweight Championship |
1992[edit]
| Date | Event | Venue | Location | Main event |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| January 19 | Royal Rumble | Knickerbocker Arena | Albany, New York | 30-man Royal Rumble match for the vacant WWF World Heavyweight Championship |
| April 5 | WrestleMania VIII | Hoosier Dome | Indianapolis, Indiana | Hulk Hogan vs. Sid Justice |
| August 29 Air date August 31 | SummerSlam | Wembley Stadium | Brent, London, England | Bret Hart vs. The British Bulldog for the WWF Intercontinental Championship |
| November 25 | Survivor Series | Richfield Coliseum | Richfield Township, Ohio | Bret Hart vs. Shawn Michaels for the WWF World Heavyweight Championship |
1993[edit]
| Date | Event | Venue | Location | Main event |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| January 24 | Royal Rumble | ARCO Arena | Sacramento, California | 30-man Royal Rumble match |
| April 4 | WrestleMania IX | Caesars Palace | Paradise, Nevada | Yokozuna vs. Hulk Hogan for the WWF World Heavyweight Championship |
| June 13 | King of the Ring | Nutter Center | Dayton, Ohio | Bret Hart vs. Bam Bam Bigelow |
| August 30 | SummerSlam | The Palace of Auburn Hills | Auburn Hills, Michigan | Yokozuna vs. Lex Luger for the WWF World Heavyweight Championship |
| November 24 | Survivor Series | Boston Garden | Boston, Massachusetts | The All Americans (Lex Luger, The Undertaker and The Steiner Brothers (Rick Steiner and Scott Steiner)) vs. The Foreign Fanatics (Yokozuna, Ludvig Borga, Jacques Rougeau and Crush) |
1994[edit]
| Date | Event | Venue | Location | Main event |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| January 22 | Royal Rumble | Providence Civic Center | Providence, Rhode Island | 30-man Royal Rumble match |
| March 20 | WrestleMania X | Madison Square Garden | New York, New York | Yokozuna vs. Bret Hart for the WWF World Heavyweight Championship |
| June 19 | King of the Ring | Baltimore Arena | Baltimore, Maryland | Roddy Piper vs. Jerry Lawler |
| August 29 | SummerSlam | United Center | Chicago, Illinois | The Undertaker vs. 'The Undertaker' |
| November 23 | Survivor Series | Freeman Coliseum | San Antonio, Texas | The Undertaker vs. Yokozuna |
1995[edit]
| Date | Event | Venue | Location | Main event |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| January 22 | Royal Rumble | USF Sun Dome | Tampa, Florida | 30-man Royal Rumble match |
| April 2 | WrestleMania XI | Hartford Civic Center | Hartford, Connecticut | Bam Bam Bigelow vs. Lawrence Taylor |
| May 14 | In Your House 1 | Onondaga County War Memorial | Syracuse, New York | Diesel vs. Sycho Sid for the WWF World Heavyweight Championship |
| June 25 | King of the Ring | CoreStates Spectrum | Philadelphia, Pennsylvania | Diesel and Bam Bam Bigelow vs. Sycho Sid and Tatanka |
| July 23 | In Your House 2 | Nashville Municipal Auditorium | Nashville, Tennessee | Diesel vs. Sycho Sid for the WWF World Heavyweight Championship |
| August 27 | SummerSlam | Civic Arena | Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania | Diesel vs. King Mabel for the WWF World Heavyweight Championship |
| September 24 | In Your House 3 | Saginaw Civic Center | Saginaw, Michigan | Diesel and Shawn Michaels vs. Yokozuna and The British Bulldog for the WWF Tag Team Championship, WWF Intercontinental Championship and WWF World Heavyweight Championship |
| October 22 | In Your House 4 | Winnipeg Arena | Winnipeg, Manitoba, Canada | Diesel vs. The British Bulldog for the WWF World Heavyweight Championship |
| November 19 | Survivor Series | USAir Arena | Landover, Maryland | Diesel vs. Bret Hart for the WWF World Heavyweight Championship |
| December 17 | In Your House 5 | Hersheypark Arena | Hershey, Pennsylvania | Bret Hart vs. The British Bulldog for the WWF World Heavyweight Championship |
1996[edit]
| Date | Event | Venue | Location | Main event |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| January 21 | Royal Rumble | Selland Arena | Fresno, California | Bret Hart vs. The Undertaker for the WWF World Heavyweight Championship |
| February 18 | In Your House 6 | Louisville Gardens | Louisville, Kentucky | Bret Hart vs. Diesel for the WWF World Heavyweight Championship |
| March 31 | WrestleMania XII | Arrowhead Pond | Anaheim, California | Bret Hart vs. Shawn Michaels for the WWF World Heavyweight Championship |
| April 28 | In Your House 7: Good Friends, Better Enemies | Omaha Civic Auditorium | Omaha, Nebraska | Shawn Michaels vs. Diesel for the WWF World Heavyweight Championship |
| May 26 | In Your House 8: Beware of Dog | Florence Civic Center | Florence, South Carolina | Shawn Michaels vs. The British Bulldog for the WWF World Heavyweight Championship |
| May 28 | North Charleston Coliseum | North Charleston, South Carolina | Goldust vs. The Undertaker for the WWF Intercontinental Championship | |
| June 23 | King of the Ring | MECCA Arena | Milwaukee, Wisconsin | Shawn Michaels vs. The British Bulldog for the WWF World Heavyweight Championship |
| July 21 | In Your House 9: International Incident | General Motors Place | Vancouver, British Columbia, Canada | Shawn Michaels, Sycho Sid and Ahmed Johnson vs. Camp Cornette (Vader, The British Bulldog and Owen Hart) |
| August 18 | SummerSlam | Gund Arena | Cleveland, Ohio | Shawn Michaels vs. Vader for the WWF World Heavyweight Championship |
| September 22 | In Your House 10: Mind Games | CoreStates Center | Philadelphia, Pennsylvania | Shawn Michaels vs. Mankind for the WWF World Heavyweight Championship |
| October 20 | In Your House 11: Buried Alive | Market Square Arena | Indianapolis, Indiana | The Undertaker vs. Mankind |
| November 17 | Survivor Series | Madison Square Garden | New York, New York | Shawn Michaels vs. Sycho Sid for the WWF World Heavyweight Championship |
| December 15 | In Your House 12: It's Time | West Palm Beach Auditorium | West Palm Beach, Florida | Sycho Sid vs. Bret Hart for the WWF World Heavyweight Championship |
1997[edit]
| Date | Event | Venue | Location | Main event |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| January 19 | Royal Rumble | Alamodome | San Antonio, Texas | Sycho Sid vs. Shawn Michaels for the WWF World Heavyweight Championship |
| February 16 | In Your House 13: Final Four | UTC Arena | Chattanooga, Tennessee | Bret Hart vs. Stone Cold Steve Austin vs. Vader vs. The Undertaker for the vacant WWF World Heavyweight Championship |
| March 23 | WrestleMania 13 | Rosemont Horizon | Rosemont, Illinois | Sycho Sid vs. The Undertaker for the WWF World Heavyweight Championship |
| April 20 | In Your House 14: Revenge of the 'Taker | Blue Cross Arena | Rochester, New York | Bret Hart vs. Stone Cold Steve Austin |
| May 11 | In Your House 15: A Cold Day in Hell | Richmond Coliseum | Richmond, Virginia | The Undertaker vs. Stone Cold Steve Austin for the WWF World Heavyweight Championship |
| June 8 | King of the Ring | Providence Civic Center | Providence, Rhode Island | The Undertaker vs. Faarooq for the WWF World Heavyweight Championship |
| July 6 | In Your House 16: Canadian Stampede | Canadian Airlines Saddledome | Calgary, Alberta, Canada | The Hart Foundation (Bret Hart, Owen Hart, The British Bulldog, Jim Neidhart and Brian Pillman) vs. Stone Cold Steve Austin, Ken Shamrock, Goldust and The Legion Of Doom (Hawk and Animal) |
| August 3 | SummerSlam | Continental Airlines Arena | East Rutherford, New Jersey | The Undertaker vs. Bret Hart for the WWF World Heavyweight Championship |
| September 7 | Ground Zero: In Your House | Louisville Gardens | Louisville, Kentucky | Shawn Michaels vs. The Undertaker |
| September 20 | One Night Only[14] | NEC Arena | Birmingham, West Midlands, England | Shawn Michaels vs. The British Bulldog for the WWF European Championship |
| October 5 | Badd Blood: In Your House | Kiel Center | St. Louis, Missouri | The Undertaker vs. Shawn Michaels |
| November 9 | Survivor Series | Molson Centre | Montreal, Quebec, Canada | Bret Hart vs. Shawn Michaels for the WWF World Heavyweight Championship |
| December 7 | D-Generation X: In Your House | Springfield Civic Center | Springfield, Massachusetts | Shawn Michaels vs. Ken Shamrock for the WWF World Heavyweight Championship |
1998[edit]
| Date | Event | Venue | Location | Main event |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| January 18 | Royal Rumble | San Jose Arena | San Jose, California | Shawn Michaels vs. The Undertaker for the WWF World Heavyweight Championship |
| February 15 | No Way Out of Texas: In Your House | Compaq Center | Houston, Texas | Stone Cold Steve Austin, Owen Hart, Cactus Jack and Chainsaw Charlie vs. Triple H, Savio Vega and The New Age Outlaws (Road Dogg and Billy Gunn) |
| March 29 | WrestleMania XIV | FleetCenter | Boston, Massachusetts | Shawn Michaels vs. Stone Cold Steve Austin for the WWF World Heavyweight Championship |
| April 26 | Unforgiven: In Your House | Greensboro Coliseum | Greensboro, North Carolina | Stone Cold Steve Austin vs. Dude Love for the WWF Championship |
| May 31 | Over the Edge: In Your House | Wisconsin Center Arena | Milwaukee, Wisconsin | Stone Cold Steve Austin vs. Dude Love for the WWF Championship |
| June 28 | King of the Ring | Civic Arena | Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania | Stone Cold Steve Austin vs. Kane for the WWF Championship |
| July 26 | Fully Loaded: In Your House | Selland Arena | Fresno, California | Stone Cold Steve Austin and The Undertaker vs. Kane and Mankind for the WWF Tag Team Championship |
| August 30 | SummerSlam | Madison Square Garden | New York, New York | Stone Cold Steve Austin vs. The Undertaker for the WWF Championship |
| September 27 | Breakdown: In Your House | Copps Coliseum | Hamilton, Ontario, Canada | Stone Cold Steve Austin vs. The Undertaker vs. Kane for the WWF Championship |
| October 18 | Judgment Day: In Your House | Rosemont Horizon | Rosemont, Illinois | The Undertaker vs. Kane for the vacant WWF Championship |
| November 15 | Survivor Series | Kiel Center | St. Louis, Missouri | The Rock vs. Mankind for the vacant WWF Championship |
| December 6 | Capital Carnage[15] | London Arena | Tower Hamlets, London, England | Stone Cold Steve Austin vs. The Undertaker vs. Kane vs. Mankind |
| December 13 | Rock Bottom: In Your House | General Motors Place | Vancouver, British Columbia, Canada | Stone Cold Steve Austin vs. The Undertaker |
1999[edit]
| Date | Event | Venue | Location | Main event |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| January 24 | Royal Rumble | Arrowhead Pond of Anaheim | Anaheim, California | 30-man Royal Rumble match |
| February 14 | St. Valentine's Day Massacre: In Your House | Memphis Pyramid | Memphis, Tennessee | Stone Cold Steve Austin vs. Mr. McMahon |
| March 28 | WrestleMania XV | First Union Center | Philadelphia, Pennsylvania | The Rock vs. Stone Cold Steve Austin for the WWF Championship |
| April 25 | Backlash: In Your House | Providence Civic Center | Providence, Rhode Island | Stone Cold Steve Austin vs. The Rock for the WWF Championship |
| May 16 | No Mercy | Manchester Evening News Arena | Manchester, Greater Manchester, England | Stone Cold Steve Austin vs. The Undertaker vs. Triple H for the WWF Championship |
| May 23 | Over the Edge | Kemper Arena | Kansas City, Missouri | Stone Cold Steve Austin vs. The Undertaker for the WWF Championship |
| June 27 | King of the Ring | Greensboro Coliseum | Greensboro, North Carolina | Stone Cold Steve Austin vs. Mr. McMahon and Shane McMahon |
| July 25 | Fully Loaded | Marine Midland Arena | Buffalo, New York | Stone Cold Steve Austin vs. The Undertaker for the WWF Championship |
| August 22 | SummerSlam | Target Center | Minneapolis, Minnesota | Stone Cold Steve Austin vs. Triple H vs. Mankind for the WWF Championship |
| September 26 | Unforgiven | Charlotte Coliseum | Charlotte, North Carolina | Triple H vs. The Rock vs. Mankind vs. The British Bulldog vs. Kane vs. Big Show for the vacant WWF Championship |
| October 2 | Rebellion[15] | National Indoor Arena | Birmingham, West Midlands, England | Triple H vs. The Rock for the WWF Championship |
| October 17 | No Mercy | Gund Arena | Cleveland, Ohio | Triple H vs. Stone Cold Steve Austin for the WWF Championship |
| November 14 | Survivor Series | Joe Louis Arena | Detroit, Michigan | Triple H vs. The Rock vs. Big Show for the WWF Championship |
| December 12 | Armageddon | National Car Rental Center | Sunrise, Florida | Triple H vs. Mr. McMahon |
2000s[edit]
2000[edit]
| Date | Event | Venue | Location | Main event |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| January 23 | Royal Rumble | Madison Square Garden | New York, New York | 30-man Royal Rumble match |
| February 27 | No Way Out | Hartford Civic Center | Hartford, Connecticut | Triple H vs. Cactus Jack for the WWF Championship |
| April 2 | WrestleMania 2000 | Arrowhead Pond of Anaheim | Anaheim, California | Triple H vs. The Rock vs. Big Show vs. Mick Foley for the WWF Championship |
| April 30 | Backlash | MCI Center | Washington, D.C. | Triple H vs. The Rock for the WWF Championship |
| May 6 | Insurrextion[15] | Earls Court Exhibition Centre | Kensington, London, England | The Rock vs. Triple H vs. Shane McMahon for the WWF Championship |
| May 21 | Judgment Day | Freedom Hall | Louisville, Kentucky | The Rock vs. Triple H for the WWF Championship |
| June 25 | King of the Ring | FleetCenter | Boston, Massachusetts | The McMahon-Helmsley Faction (Triple H, Mr. McMahon and Shane McMahon) vs. The Rock, The Undertaker and Kane for the WWF Championship |
| July 23 | Fully Loaded | Reunion Arena | Dallas, Texas | The Rock vs. Chris Benoit for the WWF Championship |
| August 27 | SummerSlam | Raleigh Entertainment and Sports Arena | Raleigh, North Carolina | The Rock vs. Triple H vs. Kurt Angle for the WWF Championship |
| September 24 | Unforgiven | First Union Center | Philadelphia, Pennsylvania | The Rock vs. The Undertaker vs. Chris Benoit vs. Kane for the WWF Championship |
| October 22 | No Mercy | Pepsi Arena | Albany, New York | The Rock vs. Kurt Angle for the WWF Championship |
| November 19 | Survivor Series | Ice Palace | Tampa, Florida | Stone Cold Steve Austin vs. Triple H |
| December 2 | Rebellion[15] | Sheffield Arena | Sheffield, South Yorkshire, England | Kurt Angle vs. The Rock vs. Stone Cold Steve Austin vs. Rikishi for the WWF Championship |
| December 10 | Armageddon | Birmingham–Jefferson Civic Center | Birmingham, Alabama | Kurt Angle vs. Stone Cold Steve Austin vs. The Rock vs. The Undertaker vs. Triple H vs. Rikishi for the WWF Championship |
2001[edit]
| Date | Event | Venue | Location | Main event |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| January 21 | Royal Rumble | New Orleans Arena | New Orleans, Louisiana | 30-man Royal Rumble match |
| February 25 | No Way Out | Thomas & Mack Center | Paradise, Nevada | Kurt Angle vs. The Rock for the WWF Championship |
| April 1 | WrestleMania X-Seven | Reliant Astrodome | Houston, Texas | The Rock vs. Stone Cold Steve Austin for the WWF Championship |
| April 29 | Backlash | Allstate Arena | Rosemont, Illinois | The Two Man Power Trip (Stone Cold Steve Austin and Triple H) vs. The Brothers of Destruction (The Undertaker and Kane) for the WWF Tag Team Championship, WWF Intercontinental Championship, and WWF Championship |
| May 5 | Insurrextion[15] | Earls Court Exhibition Centre | Kensington, London, England | The Two Man Power Trip (Stone Cold Steve Austin and Triple H) vs. The Undertaker for the WWF Championship |
| May 20 | Judgment Day | ARCO Arena | Sacramento, California | Stone Cold Steve Austin vs. The Undertaker for the WWF Championship |
| June 24 | King of the Ring | Continental Airlines Arena | East Rutherford, New Jersey | Stone Cold Steve Austin vs. Chris Jericho vs. Chris Benoit for the WWF Championship |
| July 22 | Invasion | Gund Arena | Cleveland, Ohio | The WCW-ECW Coalition (Booker T, Diamond Dallas Page, Rhyno and The Dudley Boyz (Bubba Ray Dudley and D-Von Dudley)) vs. Team WWF (Stone Cold Steve Austin, Kurt Angle, The Undertaker, Kane and Chris Jericho) |
| August 19 | SummerSlam | Compaq Center | San Jose, California | Booker T vs. The Rock for the WCW Championship |
| September 23 | Unforgiven | Mellon Arena | Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania | Stone Cold Steve Austin vs. Kurt Angle for the WWF Championship |
| October 21 | No Mercy | Savvis Center | St. Louis, Missouri | Kurt Angle vs. Stone Cold Steve Austin vs. Rob Van Dam for the WWF Championship |
| November 3 | Rebellion[15] | Manchester Arena | Manchester, Greater Manchester, England | Stone Cold Steve Austin vs. The Rock for the WWF Championship |
| November 18 | Survivor Series | Greensboro Coliseum | Greensboro, North Carolina | Team WWF (The Rock, Chris Jericho, The Undertaker, Kane and Big Show) vs. Team Alliance (Stone Cold Steve Austin, Rob Van Dam, Kurt Angle, Booker T and Shane McMahon) |
| December 9 | Vengeance | San Diego Sports Arena | San Diego, California | Chris Jericho vs. Stone Cold Steve Austin for the World Championship and WWF Championship |
2002[edit]
| Raw-branded event | SmackDown-branded event |
| Date | Event | Venue | Location | Main event |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| January 20 | Royal Rumble | Philips Arena | Atlanta, Georgia | 30-man Royal Rumble match |
| February 17 | No Way Out | Bradley Center | Milwaukee, Wisconsin | Chris Jericho vs. Stone Cold Steve Austin for the Undisputed WWF Championship |
| March 17 | WrestleMania X8 | SkyDome | Toronto, Ontario, Canada | Chris Jericho vs. Triple H for the Undisputed WWF Championship |
| April 21 | Backlash | Kemper Arena | Kansas City, Missouri | Triple H vs. 'Hollywood' Hulk Hogan for the Undisputed WWF Championship |
| May 4 | Insurrextion[15] | Wembley Arena | Brent, London, England | Triple H vs. The Undertaker |
| May 19 | Judgment Day | Gaylord Entertainment Center | Nashville, Tennessee | 'Hollywood' Hulk Hogan vs. The Undertaker for the WWE Undisputed Championship |
| June 23 | King of the Ring | Nationwide Arena | Columbus, Ohio | The Undertaker vs. Triple H for the WWE Undisputed Championship |
| July 21 | Vengeance | Joe Louis Arena | Detroit, Michigan | The Undertaker vs. The Rock vs. Kurt Angle for the WWE Undisputed Championship |
| August 25 | SummerSlam | Nassau Veterans Memorial Coliseum | Uniondale, New York | The Rock vs. Brock Lesnar for the WWE Undisputed Championship |
| September 22 | Unforgiven | Staples Center | Los Angeles, California | Brock Lesnar vs. The Undertaker for the WWE Championship |
| October 20 | No Mercy | Alltel Arena | North Little Rock, Arkansas | Brock Lesnar vs. The Undertaker for the WWE Championship |
| October 26 | Rebellion[15] | Manchester Arena | Manchester, Greater Manchester, England | Brock Lesnar and Paul Heyman vs. Edge for the WWE Championship |
| November 17 | Survivor Series | Madison Square Garden | New York, New York | Triple H vs. Shawn Michaels vs. Rob Van Dam vs. Kane vs. Chris Jericho vs. Booker T for the World Heavyweight Championship |
| December 15 | Armageddon | Office Depot Center | Sunrise, Florida | Shawn Michaels vs. Triple H for the World Heavyweight Championship |
2003[edit]
| Raw-branded event | SmackDown-branded event |
| Date | Event | Venue | Location | Main event |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| January 19 | Royal Rumble | Fleet Center | Boston, Massachusetts | 30-man Royal Rumble match |
| February 23 | No Way Out | Bell Centre | Montreal, Quebec, Canada | The Rock vs. Hulk Hogan |
| March 30 | WrestleMania XIX | Safeco Field | Seattle, Washington | Kurt Angle vs. Brock Lesnar for the WWE Championship |
| April 27 | Backlash | Worcester Centrum | Worcester, Massachusetts | The Rock vs. Goldberg |
| May 18 | Judgment Day | Charlotte Coliseum | Charlotte, North Carolina | Brock Lesnar vs. Big Show for the WWE Championship |
| June 7 | Insurrextion[15] | Telewest Arena | Newcastle, Tyne and Wear, England | Triple H vs. Kevin Nash for the World Heavyweight Championship |
| June 15 | Bad Blood | Compaq Center | Houston, Texas | Triple H vs. Kevin Nash for the World Heavyweight Championship |
| July 27 | Vengeance | Pepsi Center | Denver, Colorado | Brock Lesnar vs. Kurt Angle vs. Big Show for the WWE Championship |
| August 24 | SummerSlam | America West Arena | Phoenix, Arizona | Triple H vs. Goldberg vs. Kevin Nash vs. Chris Jericho vs. Randy Orton vs. Shawn Michaels for the World Heavyweight Championship |
| September 21 | Unforgiven | Giant Center | Hershey, Pennsylvania | Triple H vs. Goldberg for the World Heavyweight Championship |
| October 19 | No Mercy | 1st Mariner Arena | Baltimore, Maryland | Brock Lesnar vs. The Undertaker for the WWE Championship |
| November 16 | Survivor Series | American Airlines Center | Dallas, Texas | Goldberg vs. Triple H for the World Heavyweight Championship |
| December 14 | Armageddon | TD Waterhouse Center | Orlando, Florida | Goldberg vs. Triple H vs. Kane for the World Heavyweight Championship |
2004[edit]
| Raw-branded event | SmackDown-branded event |
| Date | Event | Venue | Location | Main event |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| January 25 | Royal Rumble | Wachovia Center | Philadelphia, Pennsylvania | 30-man Royal Rumble match |
| February 15 | No Way Out | Cow Palace | Daly City, California | Brock Lesnar vs. Eddie Guerrero for the WWE Championship |
| March 14 | WrestleMania XX | Madison Square Garden | New York, New York | Triple H vs. Chris Benoit vs. Shawn Michaels for the World Heavyweight Championship |
| April 18 | Backlash | Rexall Place | Edmonton, Alberta, Canada | Chris Benoit vs. Triple H vs. Shawn Michaels for the World Heavyweight Championship |
| May 16 | Judgment Day | Staples Center | Los Angeles, California | Eddie Guerrero vs. John 'Bradshaw' Layfield for the WWE Championship |
| June 13 | Bad Blood | Nationwide Arena | Columbus, Ohio | Triple H vs. Shawn Michaels |
| June 27 | The Great American Bash | Norfolk Scope | Norfolk, Virginia | The Undertaker vs. The Dudley Boyz (Bubba Ray Dudley and D-Von Dudley) |
| July 11 | Vengeance | Hartford Civic Center | Hartford, Connecticut | Chris Benoit vs. Triple H for the World Heavyweight Championship |
| August 15 | SummerSlam | Air Canada Centre | Toronto, Ontario, Canada | Chris Benoit vs. Randy Orton for the World Heavyweight Championship |
| September 12 | Unforgiven | Rose Garden Arena | Portland, Oregon | Randy Orton vs. Triple H for the World Heavyweight Championship |
| October 3 | No Mercy | Continental Airlines Arena | East Rutherford, New Jersey | John 'Bradshaw' Layfield vs. The Undertaker for the WWE Championship |
| October 19 | Taboo Tuesday | Bradley Center | Milwaukee, Wisconsin | Randy Orton vs. Ric Flair |
| November 14 | Survivor Series | Gund Arena | Cleveland, Ohio | Randy Orton, Chris Benoit, Chris Jericho and Maven vs. Triple H, Batista, Edge and Gene Snitsky |
| December 12 | Armageddon | Gwinnett Arena | Duluth, Georgia | John 'Bradshaw' Layfield vs. The Undertaker vs. Eddie Guerrero vs. Booker T for the WWE Championship |
2005[edit]
| Raw-branded event | SmackDown-branded event | ECW-branded event |
| Date | Event | Venue | Location | Main event |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| January 9 | New Year's Revolution | Coliseo de Puerto Rico | Hato Rey Norte, San Juan, Puerto Rico | Triple H vs. Chris Benoit vs. Chris Jericho vs. Batista vs. Randy Orton vs. Edge for the vacant World Heavyweight Championship |
| January 30 | Royal Rumble | Save Mart Center | Fresno, California | 30-man Royal Rumble match |
| February 20 | No Way Out | Mellon Arena | Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania | John 'Bradshaw' Layfield vs. Big Show for the WWE Championship |
| April 3 | WrestleMania 21 | Staples Center | Los Angeles, California | Triple H vs. Batista for the World Heavyweight Championship |
| May 1 | Backlash | Verizon Wireless Arena | Manchester, New Hampshire | Batista vs. Triple H for the World Heavyweight Championship |
| May 22 | Judgment Day | Target Center | Minneapolis, Minnesota | John Cena vs. John 'Bradshaw' Layfield for the WWE Championship |
| June 12 | ECW One Night Stand | Hammerstein Ballroom | New York, New York | The Dudley Boyz (Bubba Ray Dudley and D-Von Dudley) vs. Tommy Dreamer and The Sandman |
| June 26 | Vengeance | Thomas & Mack Center | Paradise, Nevada | Batista vs. Triple H for the World Heavyweight Championship |
| July 24 | The Great American Bash | HSBC Arena | Buffalo, New York | Batista vs. John 'Bradshaw' Layfield for the World Heavyweight Championship |
| August 21 | SummerSlam | MCI Center | Washington, D.C. | Hulk Hogan vs. Shawn Michaels |
| September 18 | Unforgiven | Ford Center | Oklahoma City, Oklahoma | John Cena vs. Kurt Angle for the WWE Championship |
| October 9 | No Mercy | Toyota Center | Houston, Texas | Batista vs. Eddie Guerrero for the World Heavyweight Championship |
| November 1 | Taboo Tuesday | iPayOne Center | San Diego, California | John Cena vs. Kurt Angle vs. Shawn Michaels for the WWE Championship |
| November 27 | Survivor Series | Joe Louis Arena | Detroit, Michigan | Team SmackDown (Batista, Randy Orton, Rey Mysterio, John 'Bradshaw' Layfield and Bobby Lashley) vs. Team Raw (Shawn Michaels, Kane, Big Show, Carlito and Chris Masters) |
| December 18 | Armageddon | Dunkin' Donuts Center | Providence, Rhode Island | The Undertaker vs. Randy Orton |
2006[edit]
| Raw-branded event | SmackDown-branded event | ECW-branded event |
| Date | Event | Venue | Location | Main event |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| January 8 | New Year's Revolution | Pepsi Arena | Albany, New York | John Cena vs. Edge for the WWE Championship |
| January 29 | Royal Rumble | American Airlines Arena | Miami, Florida | Kurt Angle vs. Mark Henry for the World Heavyweight Championship |
| February 19 | No Way Out | 1st Mariner Arena | Baltimore, Maryland | Kurt Angle vs. The Undertaker for the World Heavyweight Championship |
| April 2 | WrestleMania 22 | Allstate Arena | Rosemont, Illinois | John Cena vs. Triple H for the WWE Championship |
| April 30 | Backlash | Rupp Arena | Lexington, Kentucky | John Cena vs. Triple H vs. Edge for the WWE Championship |
| May 21 | Judgment Day | US Airways Center | Phoenix, Arizona | Rey Mysterio vs. John 'Bradshaw' Layfield for the World Heavyweight Championship |
| June 11 | ECW One Night Stand | Hammerstein Ballroom | New York, New York | John Cena vs. Rob Van Dam for the WWE Championship |
| June 25 | Vengeance | Charlotte Bobcats Arena | Charlotte, North Carolina | D-Generation X (Triple H and Shawn Michaels) vs. The Spirit Squad (Kenny, Johnny, Mitch, Nicky, and Mikey) |
| July 23 | The Great American Bash | Conseco Fieldhouse | Indianapolis, Indiana | Rey Mysterio vs. King Booker for the World Heavyweight Championship |
| August 20 | SummerSlam | TD Banknorth Garden | Boston, Massachusetts | Edge vs. John Cena for the WWE Championship |
| September 17 | Unforgiven | Air Canada Centre | Toronto, Ontario, Canada | Edge vs. John Cena for the WWE Championship |
| October 8 | No Mercy | RBC Center | Raleigh, North Carolina | King Booker vs. Bobby Lashley vs. Batista vs. Finlay for the World Heavyweight Championship |
| November 5 | Cyber Sunday | U.S. Bank Arena | Cincinnati, Ohio | King Booker vs. John Cena vs. Big Show for the World Heavyweight Championship |
| November 26 | Survivor Series | Wachovia Center | Philadelphia, Pennsylvania | King Booker vs. Batista for the World Heavyweight Championship |
| December 3 | ECW December to Dismember | James Brown Arena | Augusta, Georgia | Big Show vs. Bobby Lashley vs. Rob Van Dam vs. CM Punk vs. Hardcore Holly vs. Test for the ECW World Championship |
| December 17 | Armageddon | Richmond Coliseum | Richmond, Virginia | John Cena and Batista vs. King Booker and Finlay |
2007[edit]
| Raw-branded event | SmackDown-branded event |
| Date | Event | Venue | Location | Main event |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| January 7 | New Year's Revolution | Kemper Arena | Kansas City, Missouri | John Cena vs. Umaga for the WWE Championship |
| January 28 | Royal Rumble | AT&T Center | San Antonio, Texas | 30-man Royal Rumble match |
| February 18 | No Way Out | Staples Center | Los Angeles, California | John Cena and Shawn Michaels vs. Batista and The Undertaker |
| April 1 | WrestleMania 23 | Ford Field | Detroit, Michigan | John Cena vs. Shawn Michaels for the WWE Championship |
| April 29 | Backlash | Philips Arena | Atlanta, Georgia | John Cena vs. Edge vs. Randy Orton vs. Shawn Michaels for the WWE Championship |
| May 20 | Judgment Day | Scottrade Center | St. Louis, Missouri | John Cena vs. The Great Khali for the WWE Championship |
| June 3 | One Night Stand | Jacksonville Veterans Memorial Arena | Jacksonville, Florida | John Cena vs. The Great Khali for the WWE Championship |
| June 24 | Vengeance: Night of Champions | Toyota Center | Houston, Texas | John Cena vs. Bobby Lashley vs. Randy Orton vs. King Booker vs. Mick Foley for the WWE Championship |
| July 22 | The Great American Bash | HP Pavilion | San Jose, California | John Cena vs. Bobby Lashley for the WWE Championship |
| August 26 | SummerSlam | Continental Airlines Arena | East Rutherford, New Jersey | John Cena vs. Randy Orton for the WWE Championship |
| September 16 | Unforgiven | FedExForum | Memphis, Tennessee | The Undertaker vs. Mark Henry |
| October 7 | No Mercy | Allstate Arena | Rosemont, Illinois | Triple H vs. Randy Orton for the WWE Championship |
| October 28 | Cyber Sunday | Verizon Center | Washington, D.C. | Batista vs. The Undertaker for the World Heavyweight Championship |
| November 18 | Survivor Series | American Airlines Arena | Miami, Florida | Batista vs. The Undertaker for the World Heavyweight Championship |
| December 16 | Armageddon | Mellon Arena | Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania | Batista vs. The Undertaker vs. Edge for the World Heavyweight Championship |
2008[edit]
| Date | Event | Venue | Location | Main event |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| January 27 | Royal Rumble | Madison Square Garden | New York, New York | 30-man Royal Rumble match |
| February 17 | No Way Out | Thomas & Mack Center | Paradise, Nevada | Triple H vs. Shawn Michaels vs. Jeff Hardy vs. Chris Jericho vs. Umaga vs. John 'Bradshaw' Layfield |
| March 30 | WrestleMania XXIV | Florida Citrus Bowl | Orlando, Florida | Edge vs. The Undertaker for the World Heavyweight Championship |
| April 27 | Backlash | 1st Mariner Arena | Baltimore, Maryland | Randy Orton vs. Triple H vs. John Cena vs. John 'Bradshaw' Layfield for the WWE Championship |
| May 18 | Judgment Day | Qwest Center Omaha | Omaha, Nebraska | Triple H vs. Randy Orton for the WWE Championship |
| June 1 | One Night Stand | San Diego Sports Arena | San Diego, California | The Undertaker vs. Edge for the vacant World Heavyweight Championship |
| June 29 | Night of Champions | American Airlines Center | Dallas, Texas | Triple H vs. John Cena for the WWE Championship |
| July 20 | The Great American Bash | Nassau Veterans Memorial Coliseum | Uniondale, New York | Triple H vs. Edge for the WWE Championship |
| August 17 | SummerSlam | Conseco Fieldhouse | Indianapolis, Indiana | The Undertaker vs. Edge |
| September 7 | Unforgiven | Quicken Loans Arena | Cleveland, Ohio | Batista vs. John 'Bradshaw' Layfield vs. Chris Jericho vs. Rey Mysterio vs. Kane for the vacant World Heavyweight Championship |
| October 5 | No Mercy | Rose Garden Arena | Portland, Oregon | Chris Jericho vs. Shawn Michaels for the World Heavyweight Championship |
| October 26 | Cyber Sunday | US Airways Center | Phoenix, Arizona | Chris Jericho vs. Batista for the World Heavyweight Championship |
| November 23 | Survivor Series | TD Banknorth Garden | Boston, Massachusetts | Chris Jericho vs. John Cena for the World Heavyweight Championship |
| December 14 | Armageddon | HSBC Arena | Buffalo, New York | Edge vs. Triple H vs. Jeff Hardy for the WWE Championship |
2009[edit]
| Date | Event | Venue | Location | Main event |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| January 25 | Royal Rumble | Joe Louis Arena | Detroit, Michigan | 30-man Royal Rumble match |
| February 15 | No Way Out | KeyArena | Seattle, Washington | John Cena vs. Edge vs. Rey Mysterio vs. Chris Jericho vs. Kane vs. Mike Knox for the World Heavyweight Championship |
| April 5 | WrestleMania XXV | Reliant Stadium | Houston, Texas | Triple H vs. Randy Orton for the WWE Championship |
| April 26 | Backlash | Dunkin' Donuts Center | Providence, Rhode Island | John Cena vs. Edge for the World Heavyweight Championship |
| May 17 | Judgment Day | Allstate Arena | Rosemont, Illinois | Edge vs. Jeff Hardy for the World Heavyweight Championship |
| June 7 | Extreme Rules | New Orleans Arena | New Orleans, Louisiana | Jeff Hardy vs. CM Punk for the World Heavyweight Championship |
| June 28 | The Bash | ARCO Arena | Sacramento, California | Randy Orton vs. Triple H for the WWE Championship |
| July 26 | Night of Champions | Wachovia Center | Philadelphia, Pennsylvania | CM Punk vs. Jeff Hardy for the World Heavyweight Championship |
| August 23 | SummerSlam | Staples Center | Los Angeles, California | Jeff Hardy vs. CM Punk for the World Heavyweight Championship |
| September 13 | Breaking Point | Bell Centre | Montreal, Quebec, Canada | CM Punk vs. The Undertaker for the World Heavyweight Championship |
| October 4 | Hell in a Cell | Prudential Center | Newark, New Jersey | D-Generation X (Triple H and Shawn Michaels) vs. The Legacy (Cody Rhodes and Ted DiBiase) |
| October 25 | Bragging Rights | Mellon Arena | Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania | Randy Orton vs. John Cena for the WWE Championship |
| November 22 | Survivor Series | Verizon Center | Washington, D.C. | John Cena vs. Triple H vs. Shawn Michaels for the WWE Championship |
| December 13 | TLC: Tables, Ladders & Chairs | AT&T Center | San Antonio, Texas | D-Generation X (Triple H and Shawn Michaels) vs. Jeri-Show (Chris Jericho and Big Show) for the Unified WWE Tag Team Championship |
2010s[edit]
2010[edit]
| Date | Event | Venue | Location | Main event |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| January 31 | Royal Rumble | Philips Arena | Atlanta, Georgia | 30-man Royal Rumble match |
| February 21 | Elimination Chamber | Scottrade Center | St. Louis, Missouri | The Undertaker vs. Chris Jericho vs. John Morrison vs. R-Truth vs. CM Punk vs. Rey Mysterio for the World Heavyweight Championship |
| March 28 | WrestleMania XXVI | University of Phoenix Stadium | Glendale, Arizona | The Undertaker vs. Shawn Michaels |
| April 25 | Extreme Rules | 1st Mariner Arena | Baltimore, Maryland | John Cena vs. Batista for the WWE Championship |
| May 23 | Over the Limit | Joe Louis Arena | Detroit, Michigan | John Cena vs. Batista for the WWE Championship |
| June 20 | Fatal 4-Way | Nassau Veterans Memorial Coliseum | Uniondale, New York | John Cena vs. Sheamus vs. Randy Orton vs. Edge for the WWE Championship |
| July 18 | Money in the Bank | Sprint Center | Kansas City, Missouri | Sheamus vs. John Cena for the WWE Championship |
| August 15 | SummerSlam | Staples Center | Los Angeles, California | Team WWE (John Cena, Daniel Bryan, Edge, Chris Jericho, Bret Hart, R-Truth and John Morrison) vs. The Nexus (Wade Barrett, Justin Gabriel, Heath Slater, David Otunga, Skip Sheffield, Michael Tarver and Darren Young) |
| September 19 | Night of Champions | Allstate Arena | Rosemont, Illinois | Sheamus vs. Randy Orton vs. Wade Barrett vs. Edge vs. John Cena vs. Chris Jericho for the WWE Championship |
| October 3 | Hell in a Cell | American Airlines Center | Dallas, Texas | Kane vs. The Undertaker for the World Heavyweight Championship |
| October 24 | Bragging Rights | Target Center | Minneapolis, Minnesota | Randy Orton vs. Wade Barrett for the WWE Championship |
| November 21 | Survivor Series | American Airlines Arena | Miami, Florida | Randy Orton vs. Wade Barrett for the WWE Championship |
| December 19 | TLC: Tables, Ladders & Chairs | Toyota Center | Houston, Texas | John Cena vs. Wade Barrett |
2011[edit]
| Date | Event | Venue | Location | Main event |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| January 30 | Royal Rumble | TD Garden | Boston, Massachusetts | 40-man Royal Rumble match |
| February 20 | Elimination Chamber | Oracle Arena | Oakland, California | CM Punk vs. John Cena vs. John Morrison vs. Sheamus vs. Randy Orton vs. R-Truth |
| April 3 | WrestleMania XXVII | Georgia Dome | Atlanta, Georgia | The Miz vs. John Cena for the WWE Championship |
| May 1 | Extreme Rules | St. Pete Times Forum | Tampa, Florida | The Miz vs. John Cena vs. John Morrison for the WWE Championship |
| May 22 | Over the Limit | KeyArena | Seattle, Washington | John Cena vs. The Miz for the WWE Championship |
| June 19 | Capitol Punishment | Verizon Center | Washington, D.C. | John Cena vs. R-Truth for the WWE Championship |
| July 17 | Money in the Bank | Allstate Arena | Rosemont, Illinois | John Cena vs. CM Punk for the WWE Championship |
| August 14 | SummerSlam | Staples Center | Los Angeles, California | CM Punk vs. Alberto Del Rio for the WWE Championship |
| September 18 | Night of Champions | First Niagara Center | Buffalo, New York | Triple H vs. CM Punk |
| October 2 | Hell in a Cell | New Orleans Arena | New Orleans, Louisiana | John Cena vs. Alberto Del Rio vs. CM Punk for the WWE Championship |
| October 23 | Vengeance | AT&T Center | San Antonio, Texas | Alberto Del Rio vs. John Cena for the WWE Championship |
| November 20 | Survivor Series | Madison Square Garden | New York, New York | John Cena and The Rock vs. Awesome Truth (The Miz and R-Truth) |
| December 18 | TLC: Tables, Ladders & Chairs | 1st Mariner Arena | Baltimore, Maryland | CM Punk vs. The Miz vs. Alberto Del Rio for the WWE Championship |
2012[edit]
| Date | Event | Venue | Location | Main event |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| January 29 | Royal Rumble | Scottrade Center | St. Louis, Missouri | 30-man Royal Rumble match |
| February 19 | Elimination Chamber | Bradley Center | Milwaukee, Wisconsin | John Cena vs. Kane |
| April 1 | WrestleMania XXVIII | Sun Life Stadium | Miami Gardens, Florida | John Cena vs. The Rock |
| April 29 | Extreme Rules | Allstate Arena | Rosemont, Illinois | John Cena vs. Brock Lesnar |
| May 20 | Over the Limit | PNC Arena | Raleigh, North Carolina | John Cena vs. John Laurinaitis |
| June 17 | No Way Out | Izod Center | East Rutherford, New Jersey | John Cena vs. Big Show |
| July 15 | Money in the Bank | US Airways Center | Phoenix, Arizona | John Cena vs. Kane vs. Chris Jericho vs. Big Show vs. The Miz |
| August 19 | SummerSlam | Staples Center | Los Angeles, California | Brock Lesnar vs. Triple H |
| September 16 | Night of Champions | TD Garden | Boston, Massachusetts | CM Punk vs. John Cena for the WWE Championship |
| October 28 | Hell in a Cell | Philips Arena | Atlanta, Georgia | CM Punk vs. Ryback for the WWE Championship |
| November 18 | Survivor Series | Bankers Life Fieldhouse | Indianapolis, Indiana | CM Punk vs. Ryback vs. John Cena for the WWE Championship |
| December 16 | TLC: Tables, Ladders & Chairs | Barclays Center | Brooklyn, New York | John Cena vs. Dolph Ziggler |
2013[edit]
| Date | Event | Venue | Location | Main event |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| January 27 | Royal Rumble | US Airways Center | Phoenix, Arizona | CM Punk vs. The Rock for the WWE Championship |
| February 17 | Elimination Chamber | New Orleans Arena | New Orleans, Louisiana | The Rock vs. CM Punk for the WWE Championship |
| April 7 | WrestleMania 29 | MetLife Stadium | East Rutherford, New Jersey | The Rock vs. John Cena for the WWE Championship |
| May 19 | Extreme Rules | Scottrade Center | St. Louis, Missouri | Brock Lesnar vs. Triple H |
| June 16 | Payback | Allstate Arena | Rosemont, Illinois | John Cena vs. Ryback for the WWE Championship |
| July 14 | Money in the Bank | Wells Fargo Center | Philadelphia, Pennsylvania | Randy Orton vs. Rob Van Dam vs. CM Punk vs. Daniel Bryan vs. Sheamus vs. Christian |
| August 18 | SummerSlam | Staples Center | Los Angeles, California | Daniel Bryan vs. Randy Orton for the WWE Championship |
| September 15 | Night of Champions | Joe Louis Arena | Detroit, Michigan | Randy Orton vs. Daniel Bryan for the WWE Championship |
| October 6 | Battleground | First Niagara Center | Buffalo, New York | Randy Orton vs. Daniel Bryan for the vacant WWE Championship |
| October 27 | Hell in a Cell | American Airlines Arena | Miami, Florida | Randy Orton vs. Daniel Bryan for the vacant WWE Championship |
| November 24 | Survivor Series | TD Garden | Boston, Massachusetts | Randy Orton vs. Big Show for the WWE Championship |
| December 15 | TLC: Tables, Ladders & Chairs | Toyota Center | Houston, Texas | Randy Orton vs. John Cena for the WWE Championship and the World Heavyweight Championship |
2014[edit]
The WWE Network was launched on February 24, 2014. Every pay-per-view event from this point forward aired on both traditional PPV outlets and the WWE Network. However, beginning with NXT Arrival, several additional events began airing exclusively on the Network. The Network exclusives are noted below.
| NXT-branded event |
| Date | Event | Venue | Location | Main event | Notes |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| January 26 | Royal Rumble | Consol Energy Center | Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania | 30-man Royal Rumble match | |
| February 23 | Elimination Chamber | Target Center | Minneapolis, Minnesota | Randy Orton vs. John Cena vs. Sheamus vs. Daniel Bryan vs. Cesaro vs. Christian for the WWE World Heavyweight Championship | |
| February 27 | NXT Arrival | Full Sail University | Winter Park, Florida | Bo Dallas vs. Adrian Neville for the NXT Championship | Network exclusive |
| April 6 | WrestleMania XXX | Mercedes-Benz Superdome | New Orleans, Louisiana | Randy Orton vs. Batista vs. Daniel Bryan for the WWE World Heavyweight Championship | |
| May 4 | Extreme Rules | Izod Center | East Rutherford, New Jersey | Daniel Bryan vs. Kane for the WWE World Heavyweight Championship | |
| May 29 | NXT TakeOver | Full Sail University | Winter Park, Florida | Adrian Neville vs. Tyson Kidd for the NXT Championship | Network exclusive |
| June 1 | Payback | Allstate Arena | Rosemont, Illinois | The Shield (Dean Ambrose, Seth Rollins and Roman Reigns) vs. Evolution (Triple H, Randy Orton and Batista) | |
| June 29 | Money in the Bank | TD Garden | Boston, Massachusetts | John Cena vs. Alberto Del Rio vs. Bray Wyatt vs. Cesaro vs. Kane vs. Randy Orton vs. Roman Reigns vs. Sheamus for the vacant WWE World Heavyweight Championship | |
| July 20 | Battleground | Tampa Bay Times Forum | Tampa, Florida | John Cena vs. Randy Orton vs. Kane vs. Roman Reigns for the WWE World Heavyweight Championship | |
| August 17 | SummerSlam | Staples Center | Los Angeles, California | John Cena vs. Brock Lesnar for the WWE World Heavyweight Championship | |
| September 11 | NXT TakeOver: Fatal 4-Way | Full Sail University | Winter Park, Florida | Adrian Neville vs. Sami Zayn vs. Tyson Kidd vs. Tyler Breeze for the NXT Championship | Network exclusive |
| September 21 | Night of Champions | Bridgestone Arena | Nashville, Tennessee | Brock Lesnar vs. John Cena for the WWE World Heavyweight Championship | |
| October 26 | Hell in a Cell | American Airlines Center | Dallas, Texas | Seth Rollins vs. Dean Ambrose | |
| November 23 | Survivor Series | Scottrade Center | St. Louis, Missouri | Team Cena (John Cena, Dolph Ziggler, Big Show, Ryback and Erick Rowan) vs. Team Authority (Seth Rollins, Kane, Mark Henry, Rusev and Luke Harper) | |
| December 11 | NXT TakeOver: R Evolution | Full Sail University | Winter Park, Florida | Adrian Neville vs. Sami Zayn for the NXT Championship | Network exclusive |
| December 14 | TLC: Tables, Ladders, Chairs... and Stairs | Quicken Loans Arena | Cleveland, Ohio | Dean Ambrose vs. Bray Wyatt |
2015[edit]
| NXT-branded event |
| Date | Event | Venue | Location | Main event | Notes |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| January 25 | Royal Rumble | Wells Fargo Center | Philadelphia, Pennsylvania | 30-man Royal Rumble match | |
| February 11 | NXT TakeOver: Rival | Full Sail University | Winter Park, Florida | Sami Zayn vs. Kevin Owens for the NXT Championship | Network exclusive |
| February 22 | Fastlane | FedExForum | Memphis, Tennessee | Roman Reigns vs. Daniel Bryan | |
| March 29 | WrestleMania 31 | Levi's Stadium | Santa Clara, California | Brock Lesnar vs. Roman Reigns vs. Seth Rollins for the WWE World Heavyweight Championship | |
| April 26 | Extreme Rules | Allstate Arena | Rosemont, Illinois | Seth Rollins vs. Randy Orton for the WWE World Heavyweight Championship | |
| April 28 | King of the Ring | iWireless Center | Moline, Illinois | Neville vs. Bad News Barrett | Network exclusive |
| May 17 | Payback | Royal Farms Arena | Baltimore, Maryland | Seth Rollins vs. Roman Reigns vs. Randy Orton vs. Dean Ambrose for the WWE World Heavyweight Championship | |
| May 20 | NXT TakeOver: Unstoppable | Full Sail University | Winter Park, Florida | Kevin Owens vs. Sami Zayn for the NXT Championship | Network exclusive |
| May 31 | Elimination Chamber | American Bank Center | Corpus Christi, Texas | Seth Rollins vs. Dean Ambrose for the WWE World Heavyweight Championship | |
| June 14 | Money in the Bank | Nationwide Arena | Columbus, Ohio | Seth Rollins vs. Dean Ambrose for the WWE World Heavyweight Championship | |
| July 4 | The Beast in the East | Ryōgoku Sumo Hall | Sumida, Tokyo, Japan | John Cena and Dolph Ziggler vs. Kane and King Barrett | Network exclusive |
| July 19 | Battleground | Scottrade Center | St. Louis, Missouri | Seth Rollins vs. Brock Lesnar for the WWE World Heavyweight Championship | |
| August 22 | NXT TakeOver: Brooklyn | Barclays Center | Brooklyn, New York | Finn Bálor vs. Kevin Owens for the NXT Championship | Network exclusive |
| August 23 | SummerSlam | Barclays Center | Brooklyn, New York | The Undertaker vs. Brock Lesnar | |
| September 20 | Night of Champions | Toyota Center | Houston, Texas | Seth Rollins vs. Sting for the WWE World Heavyweight Championship | |
| October 3 | Live from Madison Square Garden | Madison Square Garden | New York City, New York | John Cena vs. Seth Rollins for the WWE United States Championship | Network exclusive |
| October 7 | NXT TakeOver: Respect | Full Sail University | Winter Park, Florida | Bayley vs. Sasha Banks for the NXT Women's Championship | Network exclusive |
| October 25 | Hell in a Cell | Staples Center | Los Angeles, California | The Undertaker vs. Brock Lesnar | |
| November 22 | Survivor Series | Philips Arena | Atlanta, Georgia | Roman Reigns vs. Sheamus for the WWE World Heavyweight Championship | |
| December 13 | TLC: Tables, Ladders & Chairs | TD Garden | Boston, Massachusetts | Sheamus vs. Roman Reigns for the WWE World Heavyweight Championship | |
| December 16 | NXT TakeOver: London | SSE Arena, Wembley | Wembley, London, England | Finn Bálor vs. Samoa Joe for the NXT Championship | Network exclusive |
2016[edit]
| Raw-branded event | SmackDown-branded event | NXT-branded event |
| Date | Event | Venue | Location | Main event | Notes |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| January 24 | Royal Rumble | Amway Center | Orlando, Florida | 30-man Royal Rumble match for the WWE World Heavyweight Championship | |
| February 21 | Fastlane | Quicken Loans Arena | Cleveland, Ohio | Roman Reigns vs. Dean Ambrose vs. Brock Lesnar | |
| March 12 | Roadblock | Ricoh Coliseum | Toronto, Ontario, Canada | Triple H vs. Dean Ambrose for the WWE World Heavyweight Championship | Network exclusive |
| April 1 | NXT TakeOver: Dallas | Kay Bailey Hutchison Convention Center | Dallas, Texas | Finn Bálor vs. Samoa Joe for the NXT Championship | Network exclusive |
| April 3 | WrestleMania 32 | AT&T Stadium | Arlington, Texas | Triple H vs. Roman Reigns for the WWE World Heavyweight Championship | |
| May 1 | Payback | Allstate Arena | Rosemont, Illinois | Roman Reigns vs. AJ Styles for the WWE World Heavyweight Championship | |
| May 22 | Extreme Rules | Prudential Center | Newark, New Jersey | Roman Reigns vs. AJ Styles for the WWE World Heavyweight Championship | |
| June 8 | NXT TakeOver: The End | Full Sail University | Winter Park, Florida | Samoa Joe vs. Finn Bálor for the NXT Championship | Network exclusive |
| June 19 | Money in the Bank | T-Mobile Arena | Paradise, Nevada | Seth Rollins vs. Dean Ambrose for the WWE World Heavyweight Championship | |
| July 24 | Battleground | Verizon Center | Washington, D.C. | Dean Ambrose vs. Roman Reigns vs. Seth Rollins for the WWE Championship | |
| August 20 | NXT TakeOver: Brooklyn II | Barclays Center | Brooklyn, New York | Samoa Joe vs. Shinsuke Nakamura for the NXT Championship | Network exclusive |
| August 21 | SummerSlam | Barclays Center | Brooklyn, New York | Brock Lesnar vs. Randy Orton | |
| September 11 | Backlash | Richmond Coliseum | Richmond, Virginia | Dean Ambrose vs. AJ Styles for the WWE World Championship | |
| September 14 | Cruiserweight Classic Finale | Full Sail University | Winter Park, Florida | Gran Metalik vs. T.J. Perkins for the WWE Cruiserweight Championship | Network exclusive |
| September 25 | Clash of Champions | Bankers Life Fieldhouse | Indianapolis, Indiana | Kevin Owens vs. Seth Rollins for the WWE Universal Championship | |
| October 9 | No Mercy | Golden 1 Center | Sacramento, California | Randy Orton vs. Bray Wyatt | |
| October 30 | Hell in a Cell | TD Garden | Boston, Massachusetts | Sasha Banks vs. Charlotte Flair for the WWE Raw Women's Championship | |
| November 19 | NXT TakeOver: Toronto | Air Canada Centre | Toronto, Ontario, Canada | Shinsuke Nakamura vs. Samoa Joe for the NXT Championship | Network exclusive |
| November 20 | Survivor Series | Air Canada Centre | Toronto, Ontario, Canada | Goldberg vs. Brock Lesnar | |
| December 4 | TLC: Tables, Ladders & Chairs | American Airlines Center | Dallas, Texas | AJ Styles vs. Dean Ambrose for the WWE World Championship | |
| December 18 | Roadblock: End of the Line | PPG Paints Arena | Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania | Kevin Owens vs. Roman Reigns for the WWE Universal Championship |
2017[edit]
| Raw-branded event | SmackDown-branded event | NXT-branded event | United Kingdom-branded event |
| Date | Event | Venue | Location | Main event | Notes |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| January 14 | United Kingdom Championship Tournament | Empress Ballroom | Blackpool, Lancashire, England | Tyler Bate vs. Tucker | Network exclusives |
| January 15 | Tyler Bate vs. Pete Dunne for the WWE United Kingdom Championship | ||||
| January 28 | NXT TakeOver: San Antonio | Freeman Coliseum | San Antonio, Texas | Shinsuke Nakamura vs. Bobby Roode for the NXT Championship | Network exclusive |
| January 29 | Royal Rumble | Alamodome | San Antonio, Texas | 30-man Royal Rumble match | |
| February 12 | Elimination Chamber | Talking Stick Resort Arena | Phoenix, Arizona | John Cena vs. AJ Styles vs. Baron Corbin vs. Bray Wyatt vs. Dean Ambrose vs. The Miz for the WWE Championship | |
| March 5 | Fastlane | Bradley Center | Milwaukee, Wisconsin | Kevin Owens vs. Goldberg for the WWE Universal Championship | |
| April 1 | NXT TakeOver: Orlando | Amway Center | Orlando, Florida | Bobby Roode vs. Shinsuke Nakamura for the NXT Championship | Network exclusive |
| April 2 | WrestleMania 33 | Camping World Stadium | Orlando, Florida | The Undertaker vs. Roman Reigns | |
| April 30 | Payback | SAP Center | San Jose, California | Roman Reigns vs. Braun Strowman | |
| May 7 Air date May 19 | United Kingdom Championship Special | Epic Studios | Norwich, Norfolk, England | Tyler Bate vs. Mark Andrews for the WWE United Kingdom Championship | Network exclusive |
| May 20 | NXT TakeOver: Chicago | Allstate Arena | Rosemont, Illinois | The Authors of Pain (Akam and Rezar) vs. #DIY (Johnny Gargano and Tommaso Ciampa) for the NXT Tag Team Championship | Network exclusive |
| May 21 | Backlash | Allstate Arena | Rosemont, Illinois | Randy Orton vs. Jinder Mahal for the WWE Championship | |
| June 4 | Extreme Rules | Royal Farms Arena | Baltimore, Maryland | Bray Wyatt vs. Finn Bálor vs. Roman Reigns vs. Samoa Joe vs. Seth Rollins | |
| June 18 | Money in the Bank | Scottrade Center | St. Louis, Missouri | AJ Styles vs. Shinsuke Nakamura vs. Dolph Ziggler vs. Sami Zayn vs. Baron Corbin vs. Kevin Owens | |
| July 9 | Great Balls of Fire | American Airlines Center | Dallas, Texas | Brock Lesnar vs. Samoa Joe for the WWE Universal Championship | |
| July 23 | Battleground | Wells Fargo Center | Philadelphia, Pennsylvania | Jinder Mahal vs. Randy Orton for the WWE Championship | |
| August 19 | NXT TakeOver: Brooklyn III | Barclays Center | Brooklyn, New York | Bobby Roode vs. Drew McIntyre for the NXT Championship | Network exclusive |
| August 20 | SummerSlam | Barclays Center | Brooklyn, New York | Brock Lesnar vs. Roman Reigns vs. Samoa Joe vs. Braun Strowman for the WWE Universal Championship | |
| September 12 | Mae Young Classic Finale | Thomas & Mack Center | Paradise, Nevada | Kairi Sane vs. Shayna Baszler | Network exclusive |
| September 24 | No Mercy | Staples Center | Los Angeles, California | Brock Lesnar vs. Braun Strowman for the WWE Universal Championship | |
| October 8 | Hell in a Cell | Little Caesars Arena | Detroit, Michigan | Shane McMahon vs. Kevin Owens | |
| October 22 | TLC: Tables, Ladders & Chairs | Target Center | Minneapolis, Minnesota | Kurt Angle, Dean Ambrose and Seth Rollins vs. Braun Strowman, Kane, The Miz, Cesaro and Sheamus | |
| November 18 | NXT TakeOver: WarGames | Toyota Center | Houston, Texas | Sanity (Alexander Wolfe, Eric Young and Killian Dain) vs. The Undisputed Era (Adam Cole, Bobby Fish and Kyle O'Reilly) vs. The Authors of Pain (Akam and Rezar) and Roderick Strong | Network exclusive |
| November 19 | Survivor Series | Toyota Center | Houston, Texas | Team Raw (Kurt Angle, Triple H, Braun Strowman, Finn Bálor and Samoa Joe) vs. Team SmackDown (Shane McMahon, John Cena, Randy Orton, Shinsuke Nakamura and Bobby Roode) | |
| December 17 | Clash of Champions | TD Garden | Boston, Massachusetts | AJ Styles vs. Jinder Mahal for the WWE Championship |
2018[edit]
| Raw-branded event | SmackDown-branded event | NXT-branded event | United Kingdom-branded event |
| Date | Event | Venue | Location | Main event | Notes |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| January 27 | NXT TakeOver: Philadelphia | Wells Fargo Center | Philadelphia, Pennsylvania | Andrade 'Cien' Almas vs. Johnny Gargano for the NXT Championship | Network exclusive |
| January 28 | Royal Rumble | Wells Fargo Center | Philadelphia, Pennsylvania | 30-woman Royal Rumble match | |
| February 25 | Elimination Chamber | T-Mobile Arena | Paradise, Nevada | John Cena vs. Roman Reigns vs. Braun Strowman vs. The Miz vs. Elias vs. Seth Rollins vs. Finn Bálor | |
| March 11 | Fastlane | Nationwide Arena | Columbus, Ohio | AJ Styles vs. John Cena vs. Kevin Owens vs. Sami Zayn vs. Dolph Ziggler vs. Baron Corbin for the WWE Championship | |
| April 7 | NXT TakeOver: New Orleans | Smoothie King Center | New Orleans, Louisiana | Johnny Gargano vs. Tommaso Ciampa | Network exclusive |
| April 8 | WrestleMania 34 | Mercedes-Benz Superdome | New Orleans, Louisiana | Brock Lesnar vs. Roman Reigns for the WWE Universal Championship | |
| April 27 | Greatest Royal Rumble | King Abdullah International Stadium | Jeddah, Makkah Region, Saudi Arabia | 50-man Greatest Royal Rumble match | |
| May 6 | Backlash | Prudential Center | Newark, New Jersey | Roman Reigns vs. Samoa Joe | |
| June 16 | NXT TakeOver: Chicago II | Allstate Arena | Rosemont, Illinois | Johnny Gargano vs. Tommaso Ciampa | Network exclusive |
| June 17 | Money in the Bank | Allstate Arena | Rosemont, Illinois | Bobby Roode vs. Braun Strowman vs. Finn Bálor vs. Kevin Owens vs. Kofi Kingston vs. Rusev vs. Samoa Joe vs. The Miz | |
| June 18 Air date June 25 | United Kingdom Championship Tournament | Royal Albert Hall | Kensington, London, England | Zack Gibson vs. Travis Banks | Network exclusive |
| June 19 Air date June 26 | NXT U.K. Championship | Royal Albert Hall | Kensington, London, England | Pete Dunne vs. Zack Gibson for the WWE United Kingdom Championship | Network exclusive |
| July 15 | Extreme Rules | PPG Paints Arena | Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania | Dolph Ziggler vs. Seth Rollins for the WWE Intercontinental Championship | |
| August 18 | NXT TakeOver: Brooklyn 4 | Barclays Center | Brooklyn, New York | Tommaso Ciampa vs. Johnny Gargano for the NXT Championship | Network exclusive |
| August 19 | SummerSlam | Barclays Center | Brooklyn, New York | Brock Lesnar vs. Roman Reigns for the WWE Universal Championship | |
| September 16 | Hell in a Cell | AT&T Center | San Antonio, Texas | Roman Reigns vs. Braun Strowman for the WWE Universal Championship | |
| October 6 | Super Show-Down | Melbourne Cricket Ground | Melbourne, Victoria, Australia | The Undertaker vs. Triple H | |
| October 28 | Evolution | Nassau Veterans Memorial Coliseum | Uniondale, New York | Ronda Rousey vs. Nikki Bella for the WWE Raw Women's Championship | |
| November 2 | Crown Jewel | King Saud University Stadium | Riyadh, Riyadh Region, Saudi Arabia | D-Generation X (Triple H and Shawn Michaels) vs. The Brothers of Destruction (The Undertaker and Kane) | |
| November 17 | NXT TakeOver: WarGames | Staples Center | Los Angeles, California | Pete Dunne, Ricochet, and War Raiders (Hanson and Rowe) vs. The Undisputed Era (Adam Cole, Bobby Fish, Kyle O'Reilly and Roderick Strong) | Network exclusive |
| November 18 | Survivor Series | Staples Center | Los Angeles, California | Daniel Bryan vs. Brock Lesnar | |
| November 24 Air date November 25 | Starrcade | U.S. Bank Arena | Cincinnati, Ohio | AJ Styles vs. Samoa Joe | Network exclusive |
| December 16 | TLC: Tables, Ladders & Chairs | SAP Center | San Jose, California | Becky Lynch vs. Asuka vs. Charlotte Flair for the WWE SmackDown Women's Championship |
2019[edit]
| SmackDown-branded event | NXT-branded event | NXT UK-branded event |
| Date | Event | Venue | Location | Main event | Notes |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| January 12 | NXT UK TakeOver: Blackpool | Empress Ballroom | Blackpool, Lancashire, England | Pete Dunne vs. Joe Coffey for the WWE United Kingdom Championship | Network exclusive |
| January 26 | NXT TakeOver: Phoenix | Talking Stick Resort Arena | Phoenix, Arizona | Tommaso Ciampa vs. Aleister Black for the NXT Championship | Network exclusive |
| January 26–27 Air date February 2 | Worlds Collide | Phoenix Convention Center | Phoenix, Arizona | Velveteen Dream vs. Tyler Bate | Network exclusive |
| January 27 | Royal Rumble | Chase Field | Phoenix, Arizona | 30-man Royal Rumble match | |
| February 3 | Halftime Heat | WWE Performance Center | Orlando, Florida | Aleister Black, Ricochet and Velveteen Dream vs. Adam Cole, Johnny Gargano and Tommaso Ciampa | Network exclusive |
| February 17 | Elimination Chamber | Toyota Center | Houston, Texas | Daniel Bryan vs. AJ Styles vs. Jeff Hardy vs. Kofi Kingston vs. Randy Orton vs. Samoa Joe for the WWE Championship | |
| March 10 | Fastlane | Quicken Loans Arena | Cleveland, Ohio | The Shield (Dean Ambrose, Roman Reigns and Seth Rollins) vs. Baron Corbin, Bobby Lashley and Drew McIntyre | |
| April 5 | NXT TakeOver: New York | Barclays Center | Brooklyn, New York | Johnny Gargano vs. Adam Cole for the vacant NXT Championship | Network exclusive |
| April 7 | WrestleMania 35 | MetLife Stadium | East Rutherford, New Jersey | Ronda Rousey vs. Charlotte Flair vs. Becky Lynch for the WWE Raw Women's Championship and the WWE SmackDown Women's Championship | |
| April 21 | The Shield's Final Chapter | TaxSlayer Center | Moline, Illinois | The Shield (Dean Ambrose, Roman Reigns and Seth Rollins) vs. Baron Corbin, Bobby Lashley and Drew McIntyre | Network exclusive |
| May 19 | Money in the Bank | XL Center | Hartford, Connecticut | Ali vs. Andrade vs. Baron Corbin vs. Brock Lesnar vs. Drew McIntyre vs. Finn Bálor vs. Randy Orton vs. Ricochet | |
| June 1 | NXT TakeOver: XXV | Webster Bank Arena | Bridgeport, Connecticut | Johnny Gargano vs. Adam Cole for the NXT Championship | Network exclusive |
| June 7 | Super ShowDown | King Abdullah International Stadium | Jeddah, Makkah Region, Saudi Arabia | The Undertaker vs. Goldberg | |
| June 23 | Stomping Grounds | Tacoma Dome | Tacoma, Washington | Seth Rollins vs. Baron Corbin for the WWE Universal Championship | |
| July 13 | Evolve 131 | 2300 Arena | Philadelphia, Pennsylvania | Adam Cole vs. Akira Tozawa for the NXT Championship | Network exclusive Non-WWE event |
| July 14 | Extreme Rules | Wells Fargo Center | Philadelphia, Pennsylvania | Seth Rollins vs. Brock Lesnar for the WWE Universal Championship | |
| July 27 | Smackville | Bridgestone Arena | Nashville, Tennessee | Kofi Kingston vs. Dolph Ziggler vs. Samoa Joe for the WWE Championship | Network exclusive |
Upcoming event schedule[edit]
2019[edit]

| NXT-branded event | NXT UK-branded event |
| Date | Event | Venue | Location | Notes |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| August 10 | NXT TakeOver: Toronto[16][17] | Scotiabank Arena | Toronto, Ontario, Canada | Network exclusive |
| August 11 | SummerSlam[16] | Scotiabank Arena | Toronto, Ontario, Canada | |
| August 31 | NXT UK TakeOver: Cardiff[18] | Motorpoint Arena Cardiff | Cardiff, Glamorgan, Wales | Network exclusive |
| September 15 | Clash of Champions[19] | Spectrum Center | Charlotte, North Carolina | |
| October 6 | Hell in a Cell[20][21] | Golden 1 Center | Sacramento, California | |
| October 31 | Crown Jewel[22][23] | King Saud University Stadium | Riyadh, Riyadh Region, Saudi Arabia | |
| November 23 | NXT TakeOver: WarGames[24][25] | Allstate Arena | Rosemont, Illinois | Network exclusive |
| November 24 | Survivor Series[24] | Allstate Arena | Rosemont, Illinois | |
| December 15 | TLC: Tables, Ladders & Chairs[22] | TBA | Minneapolis, Minnesota |
2020[edit]
| Date | Event | Venue | Location | Notes |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| January 26 | Royal Rumble | Minute Maid Park[26] | Houston, Texas | |
| April 5 | WrestleMania 36 | Raymond James Stadium[27] | Tampa, Florida |
Number of events by year[edit]
- 1985 – 2
- 1986 – 1
- 1987 – 2
- 1988 – 3
- 1989 – 5
- 1990 – 4
- 1991 – 5
- 1992 – 4
- 1993 – 5
- 1994 – 5
- 1995 – 10
- 1996 – 12
- 1997 – 13
- 1998 – 13
- 1999 – 14
- 2000 – 14
- 2001 – 14
- 2002 – 14
- 2003 – 13
- 2004 – 14
- 2005 – 15
- 2006 – 16
- 2007 – 15
- 2008 – 14
- 2009 – 14
- 2010 – 13
- 2011 – 13
- 2012 – 12[28]
- 2013 – 12
- 2014 – 16[29]
- 2015 – 21
- 2016 – 21
- 2017 – 25
- 2018 – 23
- 2019 – 17 (9 more confirmed)
- 2020 – 0 (2 confirmed)
- Total – 414 (11 more confirmed)
Most pay-per-view matches[edit]
These ten wrestlers have the most PPV matches (as of Extreme Rules 2019).
| Rank | Wrestler | No. of PPV matches[30][31] | First PPV match | Last PPV match |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | Kane | 174 | 1995 | 2018 |
| 2 | The Undertaker | 172 | 1990 | 2019 |
| 3 | Triple H | 170 | 1995 | 2019 |
| 4 | John Cena | 160 | 2002 | 2018 |
| 5 | Randy Orton | 157 | 2003 | 2019 |
| 6 | Big Show | 142 | 1999 | 2017 |
| 7 | Chris Jericho | 141 | 1999 | 2018 |
| 8 | Edge | 126 | 1998 | 2011 |
| 9 | Shawn Michaels | 116 | 1988 | 2018 |
| 10 | The Miz | 109 | 2004 | 2019 |
- Only the actual pay-per-view matches are counted. No pre-show or dark matches.
Themed events[edit]
Many WWE events are thematic, centered on particular types of matches, or have an annually-recurring main-event. Most themed events (sans the 'Big Four' pay-per-view events) are roughly treated like filler themed events to carry the audience until the next event dating back to the days when the In Your House system was used.[32]
| Event | Feature |
|---|---|
| Current | |
| Royal Rumble | Features the Royal Rumble match[33][34][35] |
| Worlds Collide | The event includes the interbrand Worlds Collide tournament[36] |
| Elimination Chamber | Features the Elimination Chamber match[37][38][39][40] |
| Money in the Bank | Features the Money in the Bank ladder match[41] |
| Extreme Rules | At least one of the matches will be an Extreme Rules match, other matches that are variants of hardcore wrestling may also take place[42][43] |
| Clash of Champions | Every active brand championship will be defended[44] |
| Hell in a Cell | Features the Hell in a Cell match[45] |
| Evolution | The event is themed around WWE's various women's divisions[46] |
| Survivor Series | Features elimination-style matches, particularly the traditional Survivor Series elimination tag-team match[47] |
| TLC: Tables, Ladders & Chairs | At least one of the matches will be a Tables, Ladders, and Chairs match while individual tables matches, ladder matches and chairs matches may also take place[48][49] |
| NXT TakeOver: WarGames | At least one of the matches will be a WarGames match |
| Former | |
| The Wrestling Classic | Featured The Wrestling Classic, a single-elimination tournament[50] |
| Invasion | All of the matches were between the WWF and The Alliance of WCW and ECW[51] |
| King of the Ring | Featured the King of the Ring, a single-elimination tournament[52] |
| Bad Blood | One or more of the matches will be a Hell in a Cell match[45] |
| One Night Stand | The pay-per-views were themed around the original ECW promotion and consisted of various hardcore matches[53][42][43] |
| Taboo Tuesday, later Cyber Sunday | Fans were able to vote on the matches, such as opponents or stipulations[54] |
| Breaking Point | Many of the matches were focused on forcing your opponent to give up, either through submission matches or 'I Quit' matches[55] |
| Fatal 4-Way | Many of the matches were fatal-four way matches[56][57] |
| Bragging Rights | The Raw and SmackDownbrands would compete against one another for the 'Bragging Rights' trophy and a 14-man tag team match between the two brands would take place[58][59] |
| Night of Champions | Every active WWE championship would be defended[60][61] |
| Greatest Royal Rumble | Included the Greatest Royal Rumble match, a fifty-man Royal Rumble match where the winner received the Greatest Royal Rumble trophy and belt[62][63] |
| Cruiserweight Classic Finale | The culmination of a 32-man single-elimination tournament featuring competitors 205 lbs. and under |
| United Kingdom Championship Tournament | The event includes a single-elimination tournament featuring competitors from the United Kingdom and around the world |
| Mae Young Classic Finale | The culmination of a 32-woman single-elimination tournament |
See also[edit]
References[edit]
- ^'WWE Pay-Per-Views to follow WrestleMania formula'. WWE. Archived from the original on March 19, 2007. Retrieved December 1, 2007.
- ^'WWE Network'.
- ^Flint, Joe (January 8, 2014). 'WWE launching over-the-top network'. Los Angeles Times. Retrieved January 8, 2014.
- ^'WWE pay-per-views just got bigger for 2018!'. WWE. Retrieved December 2, 2018.
- ^'Archived copy'. Archived from the original on December 22, 2015. Retrieved January 1, 2016.CS1 maint: Archived copy as title (link)
- ^'WWE.com: The Official Site of the WWE Universe'. WWE.
- ^'Extreme Rules 2014'.
- ^'Night of Champions 2014'. WWE.
- ^'LL Cool J To Open WrestleMania, 2-Hour Kickoff Show - SEScoops'. March 16, 2015.
- ^'WWE Payback 2014'. WWE.
- ^'Don't miss NXT TakeOver: San Antonio tonight'.
- ^'WrestleMania 1: Main Event'. WWE. Retrieved January 6, 2013.
- ^'The Wrestling Classic results'. Wrestling Supercards and Tournaments. Retrieved May 25, 2008.
- ^Broadcast exclusively in the United Kingdom and Canada
- ^ abcdefghiBroadcast exclusively in the United Kingdom
- ^ ab'Toronto to host SummerSlam in 2019'. WWE. Retrieved August 27, 2018.
- ^https://twitter.com/TripleH/status/1128032062139772928
- ^Johnson, Mike (June 6, 2019). 'WWE NXT UK TAKEOVER: CARDIFF TICKET DETAILS'. PWInsider. Retrieved June 9, 2019.
- ^Center, Spectrum. 'WWE Clash of Champions Spectrum Center'. Retrieved June 21, 2019.
- ^https://pwinsider.com/article/128095/wwe-hell-in-a-cell-location-top-matches-currently-advertised.html?p=1
- ^Center, Golden 1. 'WWE Hell In A Cell Golden 1 Center'.
- ^ ab'WWE schedule, list of PPVs for 2019: Money in the Bank, Backlash date, location'.
- ^https://pwinsider.com/article/128509/the-next-wwe-event-in-saudi-arabia-will-take-place.html?p=1
- ^ ab'WWE announces Survivor Series to come to Chicago in 2019'. Chicago Tribune. Retrieved November 19, 2018.
- ^'WARGAMES RETURNING TO WWE NXT PWInsider.com'. www.pwinsider.com. Retrieved March 19, 2019.
- ^Barron, David. 'WWE's Royal Rumble coming to Minute Maid Park in 2020'. Houston Chron. Retrieved February 16, 2019.
- ^'WWE and local dignitaries officially announce that WrestleMania 36 will take place in Tampa Bay in 2020'. WWE. Retrieved March 7, 2019.
- ^'2012 WWE PPV Schedule: Only 12 events advertised, Money in the Bank still listed, one pay-per-view dropped from the schedule'. Pro Wrestling Dot Net. Retrieved June 30, 2017.
- ^'Schedule of WWE PPVs Airing in the UK on Sky Box Office and Sky Sports'. 411Mania.com. Retrieved June 30, 2017.
- ^'Wrestlers with Most WWF/WWE PPV Appearances'. Internet Wrestling Database.
- ^'Wrestlers with Most WWF/WWE Royal Rumble Appearances'. Internet Wrestling Database.
- ^Matt O'Brien: POLL: DOES WWE DO TOO MANY GIMMICK PPV EVENTS? – WrestleView.com, May 17, 2012. Retrieved August 28, 2013.
- ^'Specialty Matches: Royal Rumble'. WWE. Archived from the original on December 12, 2007. Retrieved December 3, 2007.
- ^Waldman, Jon (February 2, 2005). 'Statistical survival – breaking down the Royal Rumble'. SLAM! Wrestling. Retrieved December 9, 2007.
- ^'Specialty Matches: Battle Royal'. WWE. Archived from the original on December 22, 2007. Retrieved December 3, 2007.
- ^'NXT, 205 Live and NXT UK Superstars to battle in the first-ever WWE Worlds Collide Tournament at Royal Rumble Axxess'. WWE.com. January 10, 2019. Retrieved January 10, 2019.
The WWE Worlds Collide Tournament, which will be taped for a WWE Network special, kicks off with a 15-Superstar Battle Royal on Saturday, Jan. 26, at the 8 a.m. session of Axxess.
- ^'Inside the Elimination Chamber with Triple H'. WWE.com. Retrieved February 20, 2014.
- ^'Elimination Chamber Description'. World Wrestling Entertainment. Retrieved February 2, 2008.
- ^Robinson, Jason (January 2009). 'Cold Steel'. WWE Magazine: pg. 49.
- ^McAvennie, Mike (May 21, 2007). 'The painful process of Elimination'. World Wrestling Entertainment. Retrieved February 3, 2008.
- ^Shields, Brian; Sullivan, Kevin (2009). WWE: History of WrestleMania. p. 59.
- ^ ab'WWE Extreme Rules History'. World Wrestling Entertainment. 2009. Retrieved April 25, 2010.
- ^ ab'Specialty WWE matches: Hardcore match'. World Wrestling Entertainment. Retrieved April 25, 2010.
- ^'Clash of Champions by the numbers: A match-by-match preview'. ESPN. Retrieved June 30, 2017.
- ^ ab'Specialty Matches: Hell in a Cell'. World Wrestling Entertainment. Retrieved August 3, 2010.
- ^'WWE announces all-women's pay-per-view event, Evolution'. Retrieved July 24, 2018.
- ^'Rules of the Traditional Survivor Series Elimination Match'. WWE. Retrieved June 30, 2017.
- ^'Preview:Unified Tag Team Champions Chris Jericho & Big Show vs. D-Generation X (Tables, Ladders & Chairs Match)'. WWE. Retrieved November 24, 2009.
- ^Burdick, Michael. 'Erick Rowan vs. Big Show (Steel Stairs Match)'. WWE. Retrieved December 2, 2014.
- ^'The Wrestling Classic results'. Wrestling Supercards and Tournaments. Retrieved May 25, 2008.
- ^Powell, John (July 23, 2001). 'Austin turns at Invasion'. Slam! Sports. Canadian Online Explorer. Retrieved April 27, 2008.
- ^'Once they were Kings'. The Sun. June 4, 2003. Archived from the original on December 2, 2008. Retrieved November 30, 2008.
- ^Martin, Adam (March 7, 2005). 'Update on Brock Lesnar & WWE lawsuit, Paul Heyman/ECW PPV, more'. WrestleView. Retrieved September 18, 2007.
- ^'Cyber Sunday Pay-per-view History'. WWE. Retrieved October 6, 2007.
- ^'WWE presents Breaking Point'. World Wrestling Entertainment. Retrieved June 29, 2009.
- ^'Fatal 4-Way'. World Wrestling Entertainment. Retrieved April 20, 2010.
- ^Kapur, Bob (June 20, 2010). '4-Way Matches Fatal for Championship Reigns'. Slam! Sports. Canadian Online Explorer. Retrieved August 9, 2010.
- ^Passero, Mitch (October 25, 2009). 'Results:SmackDown curses Raw'. World Wrestling Entertainment. Retrieved October 25, 2009.
- ^Passero, Mitch (October 24, 2010). 'Results:Team blue brags again'. WWE. Retrieved October 25, 2010.
- ^Powell, John; Powell, Justin (June 24, 2007). 'Vengeance banal and badly booked'. Slam! Sports. Canadian Online Explorer. Retrieved December 1, 2008.
- ^Bishop, Matt (June 30, 2008). 'Big names still on top after Night of Champions'. Slam! Sports. Canadian Online Explorer. Retrieved November 26, 2008.
- ^'Saudi Arabia to host the Greatest Royal Rumble this April'. WWE. Retrieved March 5, 2018.
- ^'WWE Greatest Royal Rumble to be shown live on Sky Sports Box Office'. Sky Sports. March 22, 2018. Retrieved March 22, 2018.
External links[edit]
| WWE Network | |
|---|---|
| Launched | February 24, 2014 United States August 12, 2014 Asia January 13, 2015 United Kingdom, Republic of Ireland, and Italy March 24, 2015 India and Middle East November 2, 2015 North Africa and West Africa January 5, 2016 Japan, Germany, Austria, and Switzerland |
| Owned by | WWE |
| Picture format | HDTV (720p16:9)[citation needed] |
| Language | English |
| Broadcast area | Worldwide (with exceptions) |
| Headquarters | Stamford, Connecticut, United States |
| Website | www.wwenetwork.com |
| Satellite | |
| Astro (Malaysia) | Channel 821 (HD) Channel 841 (SD) |
WWE Network is an over-the-topstreaming service and digital television network owned by American integrated media company WWE. In Malaysia and MENA, it operates as a television network,[1] and in the rest of the world as a streaming service using the infrastructure of Endeavor Streaming Services.[2]
On January 8, 2014, WWE announced the network would launch on February 24 in the United States. The company stated on July 31 that the service was expected to go live in Australia, Canada, New Zealand, Hong Kong, Singapore, Malaysia, Mexico, Spain, Turkey, the Nordics, the Middle East and North Africa, worldwide among other countries starting on August 17.[3] It was unexpectedly made available in the UK and Ireland a week earlier than planned, on January 13, 2015, after a delay from the previous November.[4][5] The WWE Network consists of both a 24-hour linear streaming channel and on-demand programming from WWE's library.
- 1History
- 2Programming
- 2.1Original programming
- 2.2Collections
- 2.3Repeat/archival programming
History[edit]
Development and U.S. launch[edit]
The origins of the WWE Network can trace back to 2000 when USA Network filed the lawsuit against the World Wrestling Federation (WWF, now known as the WWE) due to breach of contract which saw most of its programming moved to Viacom-owned TNN and MTV. The Delaware Chancery Court ruled in favor of the WWF in June 2000.[6][7] Then CEO, Linda McMahon, revealed that WWF wanted its own cable network and testified that before WWF signed a rights deal with Viacom, the company had floated the idea of acquiring USA's Sci-Fi Channel, and reformatting it as a dedicated wrestling network. USA executives rejected the idea, and McMahon said that former USA Networks President Barry Baker encouraged her to talk to other programmers about potential deals. 'I can tell you right now, Linda, you're not going to get anybody to give you a network,' McMahon testified.[6] In 2005, USA Network re-acquired the rights to all WWE programming.

Where Can I Download Old Wwe Ppvs
In September 2011, WWE officially announced plans to launch the WWE Network in 2011 as a pay-TV channel.[8] WWE then conducted a survey asking people if they would pay for the WWE Network if it were a premium channel. In an email sent to WWE fans who might be interested in the WWE Network, WWE surveyed fans for their thoughts about the WWE Network airing WWE's pay-per-views to subscribers for no additional charge. The survey also noted that feature repeats of Raw and SmackDown, as well as footage from World Championship Wrestling (WCW), Extreme Championship Wrestling (ECW), National Wrestling Alliance (NWA), XFL, Smoky Mountain Wrestling (SMW), American Wrestling Association (AWA), and WWE movies would also make the lineup. Original programming was also noted in the survey.[9][10]
As the result of an online poll, WrestleMania Rewind was chosen as a name for a new WWE Network show on October 17, 2011.[11] The original launch date was set for April 1, 2012, which would have coincided with WrestleMania XXVIII, and WWE's official website featured a countdown clock that would have expired on April 1. The clock was quietly removed, and the network did not launch as advertised.[12] WWE chief marketing officer Michelle Wilson allayed fears about the future of the WWE Network, saying 'There will be a WWE network in some shape or form. We are in late-stage negotiations with distributors', and confirmed that WWE Legends' House had been filmed.[13] In April 2013, WWE had switched plans and aimed to release the WWE Network as a premium pay-TV outlet, with a potential price of $15 a month.[14]
Where Can I Download Wwe Ppvs For Free
On Old School Raw in January 2014, WWE ran teasers promoting an announcement on January 8 at the Consumer Electronics Show in Las Vegas,[15] later confirming that the announcement concerned the WWE Network.[16] At the Consumer Electronics Show, WWE revealed a comprehensive plan which would see a launch date of February 24, 2014 in the United States.[17][18][19]WWE Classics on Demand closed on January 31, 2014 to make way for the WWE Network.[20] A free trial period was offered during the week of the launch.[21] The logo initially used for the WWE Network eventually became the standard logo used by the WWE corporation in August 2014.[22]
In April 2014, ahead of WrestleMania XXX, the Network received acclaim, with The New York Times saying that WWE had 'positioned themselves on the cutting edge of Internet television.'[23] Later that month, the company announced that the network had 667,000 subscribers, short of the one million subscribers they needed to break even.[24] As WWE's stock fell 50% the following month, Forbes described low subscription numbers as being of 'additional concern' for investors after WWE's underwhelming NBCUniversal renewal deal.[25] WWE offered a second free preview week of the WWE Network, which started July 7, in an attempt to sign new subscribers.[26] A second report released at the end of July indicated that the network had reached 700,000 subscribers.[27] WWE's goal was to reach one million subscribers by the end of 2014.[27][28]
Expansion[edit]
On July 31, 2014, the company announced a 10-year, Canadian distribution deal for WWE content with Rogers Media which will see the company distribute WWE Network as a premium television service.[29] Also on that date, it was announced that the WWE Network would launch in Australia, New Zealand, Hong Kong, Singapore, Mexico, Spain, and the Nordics, among others on August 12, with Italian, Arab, German, Japanese, Indian, Chinese, Thai, and Malaysian launches planned for a later date.[30][31] On October 30, 2014, in an attempt to increase subscription numbers from an announced figure of 731,000, the 6-month subscription requirement was dropped, allowing subscribers the option to cancel at any time.[32][33] WWE had originally planned to launch the network on October 1 in the United Kingdom, but was delayed for a further month.[34] The launch was confirmed to be taking place at 8 p.m. on November 3;[35] however, 20 minutes prior to the launch, WWE announced that it had been indefinitely delayed.[36][37] Vince McMahon publicly apologized for the delay.[38] It was announced on January 4, 2015, that the WWE Network would be launching in the UK and Ireland on January 19, 2015, priced at £9.99 and €12.99 respectively,[39][non-primary source needed] although some customers managed to register as early as January 13.[40]
On January 27, 2015, WWE announced that the WWE Network had reached 1 million subscribers,[41] with Vince McMahon saying that WWE would 'remain focused on delivering an outstanding value proposition for ours fans by adding new content and new features in the coming year.'[42] On February 12, 2015, WWE announced a five-year partnership with television provider OSN to bring the WWE Network to the Middle East and North Africa as a premium service.[43]
On July 30, 2015, WWE revealed the amount of subscribers for the Network at 1.156 million. This was announced as a part of WWE's financial reporting on the second quarter of the year, which had resulted in their stock price rising past $20.00 after closing on the previous day at $16.48. The total of 1.156 million paid subscribers marked a 13% decrease from the 1.315 million paid subscribers that was stated in the reports for the first quarter of 2015. WWE also revealed, including trial subscribers, they had 1.227 million Network users at the end of the second quarter, and over the entire lifespan of the Network, there have been over 2 million unique subscribers.[44]
The WWE Network launched in India on November 2, 2015.[45][46] On November 19, a report by market research and consulting firm Park Associates announced that the WWE Network had broken into the top five streaming services and trailed only MLB.tv in the sports category.[47] The WWE announced the network would launch in Germany, Switzerland, Austria, and Japan on January 5, 2016, followed by Thailand and the Philippines on February 29, 2016.[48][49][50][non-primary source needed]
In April 2017, WWE announced to have a total of 1.949 million subscribers to the WWE Network, of which 1.661 million are paid subscribers.[51][non-primary source needed] At the end of 3Q2017 the number had dropped to 1.5 million users.[52] In April 2018, WWE announced subscriber growth had reached 2.1 million, with 1.8 million paid.[53] At the end of 3Q2018 the number had dropped to 1.6 million users.[52]
In January 2019, WWE Network signed with Endeavor Streaming to replace BAMTech as operating partner.[54] In April 2019 the WWE confirmed a new version of the WWE Network would be coming with multiple tiers, ability to download content, and more content and customization.[55]
Availability[edit]
Availability of the WWE Network globallyThe WWE Network is currently available through 186 out of 193 United Nationsmember states (including all 28 European Union nations) and two observer states such as the Holy See and the State of Palestine. It is also distributed through five non-UN countries: the Republic of China (Taiwan), Cook Islands, Kosovo, Niue and Northern Cyprus.
In late 2017, Liechtenstein and China were added to the list of non-available countries,[56] however the WWE Network is still available in the Chinese special administrative regions of Hong Kong and Macau.
Programming[edit]
Original programming[edit]
WWE events[edit]
- All WWE pay-per-view events.[57]
- All WWE Network exclusive events.
- Pre-shows for pay-per-views and WWE Network exclusive events.[58]
- WWE 205 Live - A one-hour, in-ring program showcasing the cruiserweight division.
- WWE NXT - A one-hour, in-ring program showcasing the NXTdevelopmental brand, including periodic special live episodes.[57]
- NXT UK - A one-hour, in-ring program showcasing the NXT UK developmental brand.[59][60][61]
- WWE Main Event - A one-hour, in-ring program featuring wrestlers from the Raw brand. Episodes air with three weeks of delay (original broadcast continues to air on Hulu).
- WWE Worlds Collide – An in-ring series, which will feature interbrand competition between WWE's five brands: Raw, SmackDown, 205 Live, NXT, and NXT UK.
- WWE Mixed Match Challenge - A seasonal tournament featuring mixed tag team matches. Episodes air with two days of delay (original broadcast continues to air on Facebook Watch).
- Mae Young Classic - A seasonal tournament featuring thirty-two women wrestlers.[62][63]
Current shows[edit]
- The Edge and Christian Show - A comedy series and variety show starring Edge and Christian.
- Camp WWE - A TV-MA animated short-form comedy series produced by Seth Green.
- WWE Story Time - An animated series featuring WWE wrestlers telling stories from the past, narrated by 'Mean' Gene Okerlund.
- First Look - A first look at upcoming WWE Home Video releases.
- This Week in WWE - A weekly 30-minute recap of the past week's WWE programs, hosted by Scott Stanford and Charly Caruso.
- WWE Ride Along - A show following WWE personalities as they drive from city to city.
- WWE Breaking News - Breaking news from WWE.
- Southpaw Regional Wrestling - A miniseries based on a southern wrestling promotion set in the year 1987. Also airs on YouTube.
- Table for 3 - Three WWE personalities share stories over dinner.
- WWE Original Specials - A series of specials on the WWE Network.
- WWE Beyond the Ring - Documentary portions of previously-released WWE DVDs featuring various performers, organizations, and storylines.
- WWE 24 - A documentary show that goes behind the scenes of WWE events and personnel.
- WWE 365 - A documentary series that reviews a year in the career of a WWE talent.
- WWE Music Power 10 - A top 10 WWE Music countdown show.
- WWE Photo Shoot - A show where current and former WWE personnel sit down to explain the stories behind photos of their careers and lives. Also airs on YouTube.
- WWE Chronicle - A documentary series that chronicles a WWE personnel and their journey through personal interviews and candid moments. Also airs on YouTube.
- WWE Collections Spotlight - A preview show that offers a sampling of exclusive WWE Collections that are available on the WWE Network.[64]
- WWE Marquee Matches - Prominent matches in WWE history are showcased.[65]
- Superstar Picks - WWE wrestlers present their favorite matches in their entirety.[66]
- WWE Untold - Wrestlers reveal stories about moments in WWE history.
- WWE Watch Along - Pat McAfee interviews guests while watching various pay-per-views
Upcoming shows[edit]
Former shows[edit]
- Holy Foley! - A reality TV show starring Mick Foley and his family.[67]
- Jerry Springer Too Hot for TV - Jerry Springer hosts this look back at some of WWE's most outrageous and embarrassing moments.
- Unfiltered with Renee Young - Interview show hosted by Renee Young. Topics discussed include WWE wrestlers' wrestling careers and stories, music, and movies.
- WWE Legends' House - A reality television series featuring several retired personnel.
- The Monday Night War: WWE vs. WCW - A television series about the Monday Night Wars.[57]
- WWE Slam City - An animated series featuring current WWE talent, based on the Mattel toy line of the same name.
- The WWE List - A fast-paced, interactive series that tallies tweets from the WWE Universe to compile the most unusual lists ever in WWE history.
- WWE WrestleMania Rewind - The first show named to be part of the network; a retrospective look at WrestleMania's memorable moments.[11][57]
- WWE Countdown - A top-10 countdown show based on interactive fan polls.[57]
- WWE Rivalries - A show documenting rivalries in wrestling.
- Tough Talk - A post-show to Tough Enough hosted by Byron Saxton.
- Legends with JBL - An interview show hosted by John 'Bradshaw' Layfield featuring WWE Legends and Hall of Famers.[68]
- WWE Culture Shock - Corey Graves reveals a variety of unique venues, customs, music, food, and people as WWE's tour travels around the world.
- WWE Breaking Ground - A special look at the WWE Performance Center and what it takes to become a WWE wrestler.
- Stone Cold Podcast - Interview series hosted by Stone Cold Steve Austin.
- Live! With Chris Jericho - Interview series hosted by Chris Jericho.
- Swerved - A hidden camera prank show featuring WWE performers.
- Cruiserweight Classic - A thirty-two man tournament showcasing the cruiserweight division.
- WWE Talking Smack - A post-show for SmackDown pay-per-views hosted by Renee Young and several guest hosts. The show was originally a weekly post-show for SmackDown Live and was hosted by Young and Shane McMahon or Daniel Bryan or John 'Bradshaw' Layfield.
- WWE Raw Talk - A post-show for Raw pay-per-views.
- Bring It to the Table - Peter Rosenberg hosts while Corey Graves and John 'Bradshaw' Layfield debate controversial topics.
- WWE Superstar Ink - Corey Graves asks WWE wrestlers about the meaning behind their tattoos. Also airs on YouTube.
- Straight to the Source - An interview show hosted by Corey Graves.
- Something Else to Wrestle with Bruce Prichard - Interview show hosted by Bruce Prichard and Conrad Thompson.[63]
- Elias: Unplugged[63]
- Then and Now[69]
- My Son/Daughter is a WWE Superstar[70]
- WWE Game Night[71]
- WWE Talking Snack[72]
- WWE Where Are They Now[73]
Collections[edit]
WWE Network offers 'WWE Collections', which are video packages of memorable characters and storylines.[74] Currently there are 84 available collections on the service.
Current collections[edit]
- AJ Styles: Beyond Phenomenal
- Alexa Bliss: Five Feet Of Fury
- Andre the Giant
- Asuka: The Undefeated Empress
- Attitude Era: Stone Cold
- Batista Unleashed
- Becoming The Rock
- Becky Lynch: Straight Fire
- Best of Stone Cold vs. Mr. McMahon Part I
- Best of Stone Cold vs. Mr. McMahon Part II
- Best of Stone Cold vs. Mr. McMahon Part III
- Bobby 'The Brain' Heenan
- Bret vs Shawn: The Rivalry
- Curt Hawkins: Nothing To Lose
- Daniel Bryan's Greatest Moments
- Destruction of the Shield
- Dusty Rhodes: The American Dream
- DX: Are You Ready?
- Eddie Guerrero: Viva La Raza!
- Edge: You Think You Know Me?
- Finn Balor: Worldwide Sensation
- Goldberg: Who's Next?
- Hall of Fame: Class of 2018
- Hell in a Cell
- Jeff Jarrett: Ain't He Great
- Jim 'The Anvil' Neidhart
- King Booker: All Hail!
- Kurt Angle: It's True, It's True
- Lesnar: The Road To The Undisputed Title
- Ladder Match: Reaching For Glory
- The Legacy of Shane McMahon
- Mean Gene Okerlund
- Mickie James: Crazy Sweetheart
- Million Dollar Man: Priceless
- Miz: The A-Lister
- Money in the Bank
- New to WWE Network (changes regularly)
- New Classic Content (changes monthly)
- The New Day: Feel The Positivity
- Nikolai Volkoff
- nWo: For Life
- Patterson 'N Brisco: The Stooges
- Piper's Pit: Born to Controversy
- Randy Savage: Cream of the Crop
- Raw 25: 100-76
- Raw 25: 75-51
- Raw 25: 50-26
- Raw 25: 25-01
- Razor Ramon: Oozing Machismo
- Rey Mysterio: Biggest Little Man
- Ric Flair: Forever The Man
- Ric Flair: Stylin' and Profilin
- Rusev: Happy Rusev Day
- Sami Zayn: Never Be The Same
- Sammartino: The Legend Lives
- Sasha Banks: The Legit Boss
- Shawn Michaels: Heartbreak Kid
- Shawn Michaels: Mr. Wrestlemania
- Shinsuke Nakamura: The Rock Star
- Stephanie McMahon: All Business
- Sting: The Icon Defined
- The Bar: Sheamus and Cesaro
- The Brothers of Destruction
- The Collection of Jericho
- The Four Horsewomen of NXT
- The Godfather: All Aboard
- The Hardys: Team Xtreme
- The Man They Call Vader
- The NXT Takeover Collection
- The Rise of John Cena
- The Royal Rumble Match
- The Undertaker vs Triple H Collection
- The WarGames Collection
- Three Faces of Foley
- TLC Tag Teams
- Tribute to the Troops
- Trish and Lita: Evolutionary
- Trish Stratus: Stay Stratusfied
- Undertaker: Dawn Of The Deadman
- Women's Evolution
- WWE Match of the Year 2017
- WWE Match of the Year 2018
- WrestleMania Monday
- Wrestlemania Theater
Removed collections[edit]
- Chyna: Ninth Wonder of the World
- Best of Swerved Season One
- The Canadian Collection
- Dolph Ziggler vs. The Miz (removed December 2017)[75]
- Hall of Fame: Class of 2017
- WrestleMania Show Stealers
- Subscriber's Choice (changed quarterly, removed September 2017)[76]
- George 'The Animal' Steele (removed October 2017)[77]
- The Incomparable Mr. Fuji (removed October 2017)[77]
- Jimmy Snuka: The Superfly (removed October 2017)[77]
- The Cruiserweight Anthology (removed December 2017)
- Gravest Matches Ever (removed December 2017)
- Randy Orton: Apex Predator (removed December 2017)
- ECW Barely Legal Revisited (removed January 2018)
- Colorful Characters (removed February 2018)
- Greatest Matches Ever (removed February 2018)[78]
- Celebrating Black History (removed March 2018)[79]
- WWE Flashback Friday (changes weekly) (removed May 2018)[80]
- Best of WWE Network (removed March 2019)[81]
- WWE Shorts (removed March 2019)[81]
- WWE Hidden Gems (moved to Vault section)[82]
Repeat/archival programming[edit]
In addition to previous editions of the original programs listed above, the network includes many other previously aired events.

Although the United States parental guidelines rating system rates most weekly WWE television programs TV-PG, the WWE Network broadcasts a wider range of content. A parental controls block is available and content rated TV-14 and TV-MA are preceded by an advisory warning. The network airs footage featuring Chris Benoit; it marks the first major airing of Benoit footage or even mention of Benoit in said footage since his murder-suicide in 2007.[83] However, the Benoit tribute episode of Raw is replaced with the episode that aired internationally, a recap of championship matches. Also, Vengeance: Night of Champions in 2007 removes all references to Benoit during the ECW Championship match. Over the Edge 1999, infamous for Owen Hart's death at the event, is also available for the first time since its original air date; however, some portions of the event have been edited out of respect to the Hart family.[84] Matches called with Jesse Ventura on commentary, which had previously been dubbed over due to a 1991 lawsuit, are available with the original commentary.[85]
While the network promoted on-demand airings as being unedited, some instances of expletives, gestures, and all nudity are censored. Many programs were digitized for WWE 24/7 prior to the 2012 settlement with the World Wide Fund for Nature, and thus the 'WWF' and the 'WWF scratch' logo are censored in some instances.[86][87] Some original music has been dubbed over with alternate tracks such as the original intro music to Saturday Night's Main Event (May 1985 - January 1988 episodes) which originally played 'Obsession' by Animotion.[88]
At launch, all but one of New Jack's matches were removed from ECW pay-per-views, as was his surprise return at Heat Wave 1998, due to a combination of musical rights issues over his entrance music and the inability to remove the music without losing the original commentary audio. The deleted matches were eventually reinstated with replacement music and newly recorded Joey Styles commentary.[89] Several pay-per-views are copies of their condensed home video releases, rather than the live versions, and so are missing matches.[90]
Pay-per-views[edit]
Almost every WWF/WWE, JCP/WCW, and ECWpay-per-view (PPV) event ever produced is available for on-demand streaming.[85] Although WWE promotes the selection as every pay-per-view ever made, a handful of PPV events have not yet been made available.[91] This includes mostly foreign events such as WCW's Millennium Final, Collision in Korea, and the Japan Supershows, and ECW's foreign ECW/FMW Supershows, however it also includes some events held domestically such as WCW's Nitro Girls Swimsuit Calendar Special and When Worlds Collide, and WWF's No Holds Barred: The Match/The Movie.[a]
In addition the pay-per-view section contains several events which did not air on pay-per-view, such as WWE events Royal Rumble 1988[92] and WWE Global Warning Tour: Melbourne.[93] Many ECW Supercards are also listed as pay-per-views, despite never actually airing there.[94]
WWF/WWE home video[edit]
The WWE released videos under the header 'Home video classics' which include various previous home video releases that had been originally released under Coliseum Video.[95]
- Andre The Giant[96]
- Bashed in the USA[95]
- Battle Royal at the Albert Hall[95]
- Big, Small, Strange, Strong[95]
- Big Daddy Cool Diesel[97]
- Bloopers, Bleeps, and Bodyslams[95]
- Brains Behind the Brawn[95]
- Bret Hart: Greatest Matches[98]
- Bret 'The Hitman' Hart[96]
- British Bulldog Davey Boy Smith[98]
- The British Bulldogs[97]
- Bruno Sammartino: Living Legend[99]
- Brutus The Barber Beefcake[97]
- Crunch Classic[95]
- Demolition[100]
- Euro Rampage '92[95]
- Funniest Moments[95]
- George 'The Animal' Steele[98]
- German Fan Favorites[97]
- Global Warfare[97]
- Grand Slams[95]
- Greatest Hits[95]
- Grudge Match '86[95]
- 'Hacksaw' Jim Duggan[98]
- The Hart Foundation[99]
- Hottest Matches[95]
- Hulk Hogan: Real American[99]
- The Hulkster Hulk Hogan[98]
- Inside the Steel Cage[95]
- Invasion '92[95]
- Invasion of the Bodyslammers[95]
- Jake The Snake Roberts[99]
- The Ken Patera Story[99]
- Life and Times: Capt. Lou Albano[99]
- Macho Madness[97]
- Macho Man and Elizabeth[99]
- Mega Matches[95]
- Most Embarrassing Moments[95]
- Paul Bearer Hits From the Crypt[101]
- Rampage '91[95]
- Rampage '92[95]
- Razor Ramon[97]
- Ricky 'The Dragon' Steamboat[96]
- Roddy Pipers Greatest Hits[96]
- Smack’Em Whack’Em[95]
- Shawn Michaels[101]
- Sunny[101]
- SuperTape '92[95]
- SuperTape II[95]
- SuperTape III[95]
- SuperTape IV[95]
- SuperTape[95]
- UK Fan Favorites 1993[101]
- UK Rampage '93[95]
- The Ultimate Warrior 1989[100]
- The Ultimate Warrior 1992[100]
- The Undertaker Buries Them Alive[97]
- The Undertaker The Face of Fear[96]
- Unusual Matches[95]
- Villains of the Squared Circle[95]
- World Tour '90[95]
- World Tour '91[95]
- World Tour '92[95]
- WrestleFest '90[95]
- WrestleFest '91[95]
- WrestleFest '92[95]
- WrestleFest '93[95]
- Wrestling Superheroes[95]
- Wrestling Tough Guys[95]
- Wrestling's Greatest Champions[95]
WWWF/WWF/WWE programming[edit]
- Every episode of WWE Raw (except the episodes aired in the last 31 days)[85]
- Every episode of WWE SmackDown (except the episodes aired in the last 31 days)
- Every episode of WWE NXT
- Every episode of NXT UK
- Every episode of WWE Main Event (except the episodes aired in the last 16 days)
- Every episode of WWE Tribute to the Troops
- Every WWE Hall of Fame induction Ceremony (Clips from 1994–1996, full event 2004–present)
- Every episode of WWE Mixed Match Challenge
- Every episode of Saturday Night's Main Event and The Main Event
- Every episode of Tuesday Night Titans with the exception of episode 31
- Every episode of ECW
- Every episode of WWE Legends of Wrestling
- Select episodes of WWE Superstars from 2014–2016
- Select episodes of WWF Superstars from 1992
- Select episodes of Prime Time Wrestling from 1986, 1989; all from 1987–1988
- Select episodes of WWE Old School, archival house shows typically from Madison Square Garden and Boston Garden from 1973, 1975–1988, 1990–1991 and 1997.
- Select episodes of All-Star Wrestling from 1975–1982[102]
- Select episodes of Heat from 1998–1999 (all 1998; January–July 1999)[103]
- Select episodes of WWE Confidential all from 2002, select from 2003[104]
JCP/WCW programming[edit]
- Every episode of Clash of the Champions
- Every episode of WCW Monday Nitro
- Select episodes of Mid-Atlantic Championship Wrestling from 1981–1986 (204 episodes)[105]
- Select episodes of WCW Saturday Night all from 1986–1988, select from 1985, 1989, 1992–1993
- Select episodes of WCW Thunder. All from 1998-1999, January-June 2000 (episodes 1–117 of 146 total) [106][107][108]
ECW programming[edit]
- Every episode of ECW Hardcore TV
- Every episode of ECW Wrestling
Other promotions[edit]
- Select episodes of AWA Championship Wrestling from 1983, 1986–1988
- Select episodes of Global Wrestling Federation from 1990–1992
- Select episodes of Mid-South Wrestling all from 1983,[109] select from 1981–1982, 1984–1986
- Select episodes of Smoky Mountain Wrestling from 1994
- Select episodes of World Class Championship Wrestling from 1982–1988 (339 of 397) total[110]
Non-wrestling content[edit]
- Every episode of Tough Enough
- Every episode of seasons 1–7 of Total Divas
- Every episode of seasons 1–3 of Total Bellas
Additional content from WWE Libraries, which has a library of over 100,000 hours of programming, will be added over time.[111]
Removed content[edit]
- Hulk Hogan's Rock 'n' Wrestling (Removed after controversial racial statements previously made by Hogan were made public.)[112]
- Stampede Wrestling (Removed after rights dispute with Bret Hart.)[113]
- As Seen on YouTube - The best of WWE's YouTube content.[114]
- WWE Quick Hits - A monthly show with extra short clips from various DVDs & WWE Network shows.[114]
- Mick Foley Stand Up Special - A stand up special by WWE Hall of Famer Mick Foley.
- Floyd Mayweather and Big Show documentary from 2014.
Impact on pay-per-view industry[edit]
In an interview with Time, Michelle D. Wilson, chief revenue and marketing officer for WWE, stated their reason for bypassing cable companies and instead only offering the WWE Network online: 'Digital over-the-top offerings represent the future, and given that our passionate fans consume five times more online video content than non-WWE viewers and over-index for purchasing online subscriptions such as Netflix and Hulu, we believe the time is now for a WWE Network.'[115]
In response to the announcement, DirecTV issued a statement saying that they are re-evaluating whether to continue carrying WWE's pay-per-view events. Due to the fact that these events would also be available on the WWE Network once it launches, it might reduce the number of pay-per-view purchases via cable and satellite providers. Vince McMahon suggested that pay-TV operators would ultimately decide to continue to carry WWE's pay-per-view events, given that providers keep a significant share of each purchase, and incur minimal costs (apart from WWE's share of the fee for each purchase) to carry the events: 'It's found money for them.'[116] DirecTV later quietly dropped carriage of WWE PPVs. In response, WWE said, 'Yes, DIRECTV has decided to stop offering our PPV's residentially and commercially. The only other option would be to work through the local cable provider.' [117]
On February 19, 2014, Dish Network announced that they would carry WWE pay-per-views on an event by event basis, beginning with Elimination Chamber. Dish Network later released a statement saying, 'Dish will not offer the ‘WWE Elimination Chamber’ PPV on 2/23. WWE is not willing to adjust their PPV costs to satellite and cable companies, which is unfair to their customers. We need to re-focus our efforts to support partners that better serve Dish customers.'[118] Dish later made a decision to air WrestleMania XXX.[119] Dish declined to offer WrestleMania 31 and 32 but did offer WrestleMania 33 in 2017.[120]
Advertising[edit]
In October 2014, it was reported Mattel, Kmart, and Pepsi would begin advertising on the network starting the week of October 13. Wilson stated that although no commercial breaks will occur during scheduled programming, 30 second adverts would run in between shows, and that one 15 or 30-second advert would be shown prior to every fourth stream of on-demand content.[121][122]
Notes[edit]
- ^The steel cage match from No Holds Barred: The Match/The Movie is available on the home video Supertape, which is available on the WWE Network.
References[edit]
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- ^Spangler, Todd; Spangler, Todd (14 January 2019). 'Endeavor Video-Streaming Group Signs WWE, Which Ended Deal With Disney's BAMTech'.
- ^'WWE Network'.
- ^'Beaking News: WWE Network Launches Early in UK & Ireland'. 13 January 2015.
- ^WWE Network Launches February 24 Retrieved January 25, 2014
- ^ abhttps://www.fiercevideo.com/cable/revenge-mcmahons-story-behind-wwe-network
- ^'WWF Wins Judicial Smackdown Against USA'. E! Online. 29 June 2000.
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- ^Taube, Aaron (May 19, 2014). 'Vince McMahon's Plan To Turn Around The WWE Is Blowing Up In His Face'. Business Insider. Retrieved July 13, 2014.
- ^Mcgrath, Maggie (May 16, 2014). 'WWE Slammed: Stock Plunges Nearly 50% As NBCUniversal Deal Fails To Impress'. Forbes. Retrieved July 13, 2014.
- ^Taube, Aaron (July 7, 2014). 'The Money-Losing WWE Network Is Making Another Big Push For Subscribers'. Business Insider. Retrieved July 13, 2014.
- ^ abGraser, Marc (July 31, 2014). 'WWE Network Ready for International Rollout to Pin Down New Subscribers'. Variety. Retrieved August 14, 2014.
- ^'WWE Network on track to 1 million subscribers'. WWE Official Website. April 7, 2014. Archived from the original on April 10, 2014. Retrieved July 13, 2014.
- ^'WWE Signs 10-Year Canadian TV Deal With Rogers'. The Hollywood Reporter. Retrieved July 31, 2014.
- ^Alvarez, Edgar (July 31, 2014). 'WWE Network heading to 170 new countries next month'. Engadget. Retrieved July 31, 2014.
- ^Baysinger, Tim (August 12, 2014). 'WWE Offering OTT Network Internationally'. Broadcasting & Cable. Retrieved August 12, 2014.
- ^Graser, Marc (October 30, 2014). 'WWE Network Grows to 731,000 Subscribers, Drops Contract Requirement'. Variety. Retrieved October 30, 2014.
- ^Flint, Joe (October 30, 2014). 'WWE to Drop Six-Month Commitment for Online Video Subscriptions'. Wall Street Journal. Retrieved October 30, 2014.
- ^'Launch of WWE Network's online service delayed in UK'. BBC. October 1, 2014. Retrieved December 10, 2014.
- ^'WWE Network launches in the UK'. Radio Times. November 3, 2014. Retrieved December 10, 2014.
- ^Rigby, Sam (November 3, 2014). 'WWE Network UK launch delayed until further notice'. Digital Spy. Retrieved November 4, 2014.
- ^Martin, Findlay (November 3, 2014). 'WWE Network delayed in the UK again'. Power Slam. Retrieved December 10, 2014.
- ^Goodacre, Kate; Nissim, Mayer (November 5, 2014). 'Vince McMahon sorry for WWE Network UK delay: 'We're working day and night''. Digital Spy. Retrieved December 10, 2014.
- ^'WWE Network available in UK and Ireland'. WWE. 4 January 2015. Retrieved 4 January 2015.
- ^Caldwell, James (January 13, 2014). 'WWE Network launches early in U.K. market'. PW Torch. Retrieved January 27, 2014.
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