Gladiators: Train 2 Win Explained

Genre:Children's sports entertainment game show
Creator:Dan Carr and John Ferraro
Based On:Gladiators 2000 (1994–1996)
Presenter:Sharron Davies and Daley Thompson (1995)
Various Gladiators on rotation (1996)
Margherita Taylor (1997–98)
Kyran Bracken (1997)
Lee Sharpe (1998)
Starring:John Anderson (1995–96)
Andrew Norgate (1997–98)
Narrated:John Sachs (1995–96)
Mitch Johnson (1997–98)
Country:United Kingdom
Language:English
Num Series:4
Num Episodes:37
Runtime:25 minutes
Company:LWT in association with The Samuel Goldwyn Company
Channel:ITV
Related:Scratchy & Co.
Gladiators (1992–2000)

Gladiators: Train 2 Win is a children's spin-off of the British television series Gladiators and was based on its American counterpart Gladiators 2000 (1994–1996). Aired on ITV, the series featured younger contestants playing adapted versions of the games featured in the parent series, all while being mentored and assisted by a captain Gladiator.[1] Four series of the programme were broadcast, airing from 2 September 1995 to 13 March 1998.

Synopsis

The first series focused heavily on fitness education, and involved each of the young contenders answering questions relating to health and fitness while competing against each other playing specially adapted games. This series was presented by Sharron Davies, who at the time, was starring in the parent series as Amazon, and Daley Thompson. This series was initially broadcast on Saturday mornings as part of Scratchy & Co.

The second series heavily revised the format and it became much more like the main show. The series was moved to 4:40pm on Fridays, and the majority of the educational content was removed. Contenders now play in teams of two, each captained by a Gladiator. As many of the games featured Gladiator participation, the series was notable for being the first time that Gladiators had competed against one another in any form of domestic competition. Contenders competed in four events in each episode from a pool of six (See below). Like the main show every episode ended with the Eliminator. This format was retained for the third and fourth series. The second series was presented by the Gladiators themselves, working on rotation. Margherita Taylor and Kyran Bracken were appointed for the third series. Lee Sharpe replaced Bracken for the fourth and final series.

John Sachs acted as commentator for the first and second series, before being replaced by Mitch Johnson for the third and fourth series. John Anderson acted as referee for the first two series, before timekeeper Andrew Norgate became referee for series three and four. Scripted commentary writers include: Andrew Whelan.

Events

Transmissions

Series Start date End date Episodes
1 2 September 1995 14 October 1995 7
2 5 January 1996 8 March 1996 10
3 10 January 1997 21 March 1997 10
4 9 January 1998 13 March 1998 10

External links

Notes and References

  1. News: Kelly . Philippa . 2022-07-29 . Gladiators, ready! 90s TV hit set for a reboot . en-GB . The Guardian . 2023-02-15 . 0261-3077.