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Tony Schiavone Bio, Age, Family, Education, Spouse, Children. Nationality, Net Worth, Measurement,Career, Accomplishment

Tony Schiavone  Biography

Tony Schiavone also is known as Noah Anthony Schiavone Jr. is an American broadcaster. He is the play-by-play broadcaster for the Gwinnett Stripers of minor league baseball’s International League, and a commentator for Major League Wrestling (MLW).

Back then he was a sports radio host and a professional wrestling announcer known for his work in the National Wrestling Alliance (NWA), the World Wrestling Federation (WWF), and World Championship Wrestling (WCW).

A 2013 WWE.com article noted: “At the height of the Monday Night War, veteran broadcaster Tony Schiavone’s voice was as vital to the onscreen product of World Championship Wrestling as Jim Ross’ Oklahoma growl was to WWE.”

Tony Schiavone  Age

He was born on November 7, 1957, in Craigsville, Virginia. Currently, he is 61 years old. His Birth Sign is Scorpio.

Tony Schiavone  Family

His family’s result is under review.

Tony Schiavone  Education

Schiavone attended James Madison University.

Tony Schiavone  Spouse

He married Lois Schiavone in 1981.

Tony Schiavone  Children

He has five children namely Laurie Schiavone, Matt Schiavone, Tim Schiavone, Chris Schiavone and Jon Michael Schiavone.

Tony Schiavone  Nationality

His nationality is American.

Tony Schiavone  Net Worth

Tony’s net worth result is under review.

Tony Schiavone  Measurement

He has a height of‎5 ft 8 in (1.73 m) and weighs 185 lb (84 kg).

Tony Schiavone  Career

Jim Crockett Promotions (1983–1989)

Schiavone broadcast alongside David Crockett beginning in 1985 until 1989 on Superstation TBS. Together they facilitated NWA’s World Championship Wrestling live before a little in-studio group of spectators in Atlanta.

The show disclosed on TBS on Saturday Mornings at 9 am and Saturday nights at 6 pm and was utilized as a vehicle to advance live NWA field occasions and acquaint their stars with a national crowd as TBS was the head broadly communicated link station at the time.

World Wrestling Federation (1989–1990)

He was signed by Vince McMahon’s WWF for a one-year contract from April 1989 through April 1990. During his time with the company, he was most notable for being the main play-by-play announcer for their SummerSlam 1989 and Royal Rumble 1990 pay-per-views alongside Jesse “The Body” Ventura.

Schiavone returned soon afterward to WCW, the former Crockett promotion by then owned by media mogul Ted Turner. For the WWF, other than Ventura, Schiavone commentated alongside others including Lord Alfred Hayes, Gorilla Monsoon, Hillbilly Jim, Rod Trongard, and Bobby “The Brain” Heenan. Behind the scenes, Tony produced numerous home videos for Coliseum Video.

Schiavone, who has remained on good terms with the McMahon family in the years since, admitted years later that leaving WWF was his biggest career mistake, and that he asked McMahon for his job back as soon as he realized what the Turner Broadcasting System had done to the former Jim Crockett Promotions upon acquiring it. McMahon turned him down, so that Schiavone wouldn’t have to move his young family again, but was open to working with him in the future.

World Championship Wrestling (1990–2001)

Schiavone turned into the lead voice for WCW’s leader program, Monday Nitro. He additionally filled in as the lead host of Thunder, ordinarily working nearby Mike Tenay, Bobby Heenan, Larry Zbyszko, and later with Mark Madden and Scott Hudson. Before the appearance of Nitro and Thunder, Schiavone facilitated WCW Saturday Night and WCW WorldWide.

He prepared an appearance in the film to Rumble. At the point when WCW’s primary resources were purchased by the World Wrestling Federation (WWF/presently WWE) in 2001, he was not held by WWE. During his residency with WCW, Schiavone built up a notoriety for his ridiculous reporting style, announcing numerous Nitro communicates to be “the best”, or “most hazardous”, broadcast “ever of game.”

Be that as it may, when this overstatement was rehashed on a week after week premise all through the Monday Night Wars, the expression lost importance. Schiavone expressed that it was every bit of relevant information and any individual who states generally is a trick and is the most exceedingly terrible sort of fan.

He professes to have been entirely OK with his steady pushing of the WCW item and said that consistently always bested the most recent night and in this way turned into the following most noteworthy night ever of game.

Mick Foley incident

A notorious occurrence including Schiavone happened on January 4, 1999, Nitro. Nitro was airing live against the pre-taped WWF Raw is War on USA Network and was to highlight a rematch between WCW World Heavyweight Champion Kevin Nash and previous victor Bill Goldberg from Starrcade, where Nash had finished Goldberg’s undefeated streak and taken his title under disputable conditions.

The Nitro scene was additionally the main appearance of “Hollywood” Hulk Hogan since he declared his “retirement” from expert wrestling on the Thanksgiving 1998 version of The Tonight Show with Jay Leno. In the interim, Raw was to include Mick Foley, who was wrestling as Mankind at the time and who had beforehand for WCW as Cactus Jack, winning his first WWF Championship in a match against The Rock.

Nonetheless, at the time Raw was taped while Nitro was live, and it was a training for WCW and official maker Eric Bischoff to ruin pre-taped Raw scenes, by telling the WCW group of spectators the consequences of the Raw show, and not give fans motivations to change the channel.

As indicated by Foley, who expounded on the occurrence in the main section of his book Foley Is Good (and the Real World is Faker than Wrestling), this was to be an essential night for WCW as individuals accepted that WCW, whose record dash of 84 successive Monday night wins in the appraisals had been snapped by Raw in April 1998 and had just eight no holds barred successes from that point onward, would change the evaluations tide back to them and possibly assume control over the lead in the Monday Night Wars.

During the show, Schiavone ruined the aftereffect of Raw’s headliner by saying that Foley, the previous Cactus Jack, would win, wryly commenting “That is going to put a few butts in the seats”. Foley was really annoyed with what he had heard and called Schiavone to discuss it. At the point when Schiavone got back to Foley, he disclosed to Foley that Bischoff had requested Schiavone to uncover his title prevails upon the air.

The procedure, be that as it may, reverse discharges on Bischoff. Very quickly after Schiavone ruined Foley’s title win, 600,000 family units changed from Nitro to Raw, to watch Foley win the title. This was sufficient to give the WWF the evaluations win for the evening, with a 5.7 last appraising to Nitro’s 5.0. WCW’s evaluations never observed in excess of a 5.0 clashing with Raw again and Nitro’s appraising sank beneath 5.0 and before the year’s over was attempting to remain above 3.0.

Total Nonstop Action Wrestling (2003)

In 2003, Schiavone made an appearance in NWA: Total Nonstop Action (NWA: TNA, later Total Nonstop Action Wrestling) during one of their weekly pay-per-views. Schiavone interrupted an interview with Goldylocks and Percy Pringle and proceeded to cut a worked shoot promo in which he insulted both of them.

Mike Tenay, TNA’s lead broadcaster and Schiavone’s former WCW colleague, then entered the ring and the two got into an argument over their careers and what happened during the last days of WCW, where both men lost their jobs. The promo ended when Vince Russo entered the ring and promised Schiavone a job with him. However, nothing ever came of that as Schiavone only made one more appearance in TNA.

Major League Wrestling (2017–present)

On October 5, 2017, Schiavone returned to professional wrestling at the inaugural event of the resurrected Major League Wrestling (MLW). At the show, Schiavone provided color commentary for the event’s matches.

He has since continued to provide his commentary work for MLW’s television show, MLW Fusion. After taking a break in early 2019 from commentating due to conflicting schedules, he will return in July 2019.

Baseball

After wrestling, Schiavone became the morning sports anchor for both WDUN in Gainesville and WSB-AM in Atlanta simultaneously, despite the two stations having different owners (WDUN has a partnership with Cox Media Group, which owns WSB-TV and WSB-AM.)

Schiavone also has done morning sports reports for Cox sister stations WHIO AM/FM in Dayton, Ohio. Additionally, Schiavone is a writer for the Georgia Bulldogs Radio Network and produced the Best of the Bulldogs, which won the AP Award for Best Sports Program in 2004.

After a few years of work with the Braves system including pre-game and post-game radio coverage, and also spot duty as an official scorer for games, Schiavone returned to play-by-play duties on the radio when the Gwinnett Braves began their first season in Lawrenceville, Georgia as Atlanta’s AAA-level affiliate for the 2009–10 season.

Football

Along with being a writer for the Georgia Bulldogs Radio Network, Schiavone also works one of the post-game talks shows on the Georgia Bulldogs Radio Network for home and away games alongside former University of Georgia quarterback David Greene.

Podcasting career

On January 30, 2017, Schiavone began hosting the What Happened When? podcast with co-host Conrad Thompson on MLW Radio discussing stories from Schiavone’s time with Jim Crockett Promotions, his stint in the WWF and his WCW tenure.

Schiavone also co-hosts the “Pro Wrestling Wednesday” podcast with lifelong wrestling fan Beau Le Blanc for WZGC FM 92.9 The Game in Atlanta, a station in which he often does fill-in work for their sports flash updates.

Accomplishments

-Wrestling Observer Newsletter

-Worst Television Announcer (1999, 2000)

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Update: 2023-11-12