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World Wrestling Entertainment (WWE), formerly the World Wrestling Federation (WWF) before May 5, 2002, utilized a brand extension (officially known as the WWE Brand Extension) to assign on-screen employees to one of its primary television programs. Originally, WWE used both Raw and SmackDown! to promote on-screen talent, storylines, and matches. However, with the Brand Extension, each program would featured distinct wrestlers, storylines, and matches. In this instance of a brand extension, each brand is treated as a conference that is a part of a governing body, in that each brand features distinct production relating to its own roster that help promote the governing company, WWE.

First used in 2002 with Raw and SmackDown, the WWF conducted a mock-sports draft lottery in which the storyline owners of each brand, Ric Flair (Raw) and WWF Chairman Vince McMahon (SmackDown), drafted wrestlers onto their brand during an episode of Raw and over the WWF's official website until every wrestler was assigned a brand. In 2006, WWE extended its franchise by adding the Extreme Championship Wrestling (ECW) brand, which was headed by Paul Heyman, and ECW on Sci Fi program. Heyman drafted one superstar from Raw and SmackDown, while the rest of the roster consisted of alumni of the original Extreme Championship Wrestling promotion and other signed free agents. The ECW brand operated until 2010, when WWE Chairman McMahon announced its termination.

History[]

Raw and SmackDown![]

Background[]

After acquiring the remains of World Championship Wrestling (WCW), its main competitor throughout the 1990s, in March 2002, the World Wrestling Federation (WWF) sought a way to split itself into two separate promotions, because of the numbers of talent that it had acquired as part of its purchase.[1] On March 18, 2002, Linda McMahon announced the "brand extension" in which the company would be split into two distinct brands.[1]

In terms of storyline, Ric Flair had become fifty percent owner of the WWF following Survivor Series 2001 after Shane and Stephanie McMahon had sold their stocks to him in order to purchase WCW and Extreme Championship Wrestling (ECW), respectively.[2] Vince McMahon detested having to share his creation with Ric Flair and looked for a way to dissolve their partnership.[3] After entering a feud with The Undertaker, Flair sought a match with him at WrestleMania X8.[3] However, the WWF Board of Directors would only allow the match if Flair were to return one hundred percent control to McMahon.[3][4] Flair agreed, however, the Board also reserved the right to review the ownership status of the WWF following WrestleMania.[3][4] Their decision was to split the entire WWF roster into two separate entities, with Vince McMahon in control of the SmackDown! brand and Ric Flair in control of the Raw brand.[5][6] A draft was held the following week on RAW. Each owner would get a total of thirty picks.[7] The brand extension officially began on April 1, 2002.[1] By having two brands in place, the WWF was able to increase the number of live events held each year from 200 to 350, including tours in several new international markets.[1]

Superstar selections[]

The 2002 World Wrestling Federation (WWF) Brand Extension Draft took place at Penn State University in State College, Pennsylvania on March 25, 2002.[8][9] The first half of the draft was televised live on TNN for two hours, as part of WWE (known then as the WWF)'s flagship program, Raw.[8] The second half was conducted over the internet on WWF's official website, WWF.com.[9] There were thirty draft picks, with sixty superstars drafted overall by co-owners of the WWF, Ric Flair and Vince McMahon, onto their respective brands, Raw and SmackDown!.[10] For the televised half of the draft, ten brand selections were manually made by Flair and McMahon.[8][9][10] The remaining superstars were divided randomly in a draft lottery, with each brand receiving a grand total of thirty superstars.[11]

On the March 25, 2002 episode of Raw, Vince McMahon won a coin toss to determine who would receive the first draft selection.

Overall
Pick #
Brand
[9][11]
Pick #
[9][11]
Superstar/Diva
[9][11]
Notes
1 SmackDown! 1 The Rock
2 Raw 1 The Undertaker
3 SmackDown! 2 Kurt Angle
4 Raw 2 n.W.o (Kevin Nash, Scott Hall & X-Pac) Mr. McMahon allowed the n.W.o to be drafted as a group.
5 SmackDown! 3 Chris Benoit Drafted while recovering from neck surgery. Benoit made his WWE return on the Raw brand instead.
6 Raw 3 Kane
7 SmackDown! 4 "Hollywood" Hulk Hogan
8 Raw 4 Rob Van Dam When drafted, Van Dam was the WWF Intercontinental Champion, making the title exclusive to Raw.[8][10]
9 SmackDown! 5 Billy and Chuck When drafted, Billy and Chuck were the WWF Tag Team Champions, making the title exclusive to SmackDown! In addition, Billy and Chuck's manager, Rico went along with them in the draft.[8][10]
10 Raw 5 Booker T
11 SmackDown! 6 Edge
12 Raw 6 The Big Show
13 SmackDown! 7 Rikishi
14 Raw 7 Bubba Ray Dudley
15 SmackDown! 8 D-Von Dudley
16 Raw 8 Brock Lesnar When drafted, Lesnar's manager, Paul Heyman, went along with him in the draft.
17 SmackDown! 9 Mark Henry
18 Raw 9 William Regal When drafted, Regal was the WWF European Champion, making the title exclusive to Raw.[8][10]
19 SmackDown! 10 Maven When drafted, Maven was the WWF Hardcore Champion, making the title exclusive to SmackDown! However, Raven would defeat Maven for the championship prior to the brand separation, bring the title to Raw with him.[8][10]
20 Raw 10 Lita First Diva Drafted. Only Diva selected on television.
21 SmackDown! 11 Billy Kidman
22 Raw 11 Bradshaw
23 SmackDown! 12 Tajiri When drafted, Tajiri was the WWF Cruiserweight Champion, making the title exclusive to SmackDown!.
24 Raw 12 Steven Richards
25 SmackDown! 13 Chris Jericho
26 Raw 13 Matt Hardy
27 SmackDown! 14 Ivory
28 Raw 14 Raven
29 SmackDown! 15 Albert
30 Raw 15 Jeff Hardy
31 SmackDown! 16 The Hurricane
32 Raw 16 Mr.Perfect
33 SmackDown! 17 Al Snow
34 Raw 17 Spike Dudley
35 SmackDown! 18 Lance Storm
36 Raw 18 D-Lo Brown
37 SmackDown! 19 Diamond Dallas Page
38 Raw 19 Shawn Stasiak
39 SmackDown! 20 Torrie Wilson
40 Raw 20 Terri
41 SmackDown! 21 Scotty 2 Hotty
42 Raw 21 Jacqueline
43 SmackDown! 22 Stacy Keibler
44 Raw 22 Goldust
45 SmackDown! 23 Christian
46 Raw 23 Trish Stratus
47 SmackDown! 24 Test
48 Raw 24 Justin Credible
49 SmackDown! 25 Faarooq
50 Raw 25 Big Bossman
51 SmackDown! 26 Tazz
52 Raw 26 Tommy Dreamer
53 SmackDown! 27 Hardcore Holly
54 Raw 27 Crash Holly
55 SmackDown! 28 Val Venis
56 Raw 28 Mighty Molly
57 SmackDown! 29 Perry Saturn

Note:

  • Picks #1-20 were made live on Raw on TNN
  • Picks #21 -57 were conducted over WWF.com.

Aftermath[]

Steve Austin signed with Raw on the April 1st 2002 edition of RAW, following advice from Vince McMahon and Ric Flair. Austin ended up giving both men a Stone Cold Stunner as well. On the June 10, 2002 edition of Raw, Vince Mcmahon became the sole owner of World Wrestling Entertainment when he defeated Flair in a No Holds Barred match.[12] The WWF had been renamed to World Wrestling Entertainment a month prior.

As of 2004, much of the talent originally drafted had departed the WWE. As oppose to re-combining the shows, the WWE decided to take on more new younger talent to market each brand.

ECW[]

Background[]

After World Wrestling Entertainment (WWE) bought all of Extreme Championship Wrestling (ECW)'s assets in 2003, the company began releasing DVDs promoting the original ECW.[13] Soon afterwards, the company promoted two ECW reunion shows for ECW Alumni entitled, ECW One Night Stand in 2005 and in 2006.[13]

On May 26, 2006, WWE announced a launch of a new brand, ECW, a revival of the 1990s promotion.[14] The new brand debuted on Sci Fi Channel on June 13, 2006.[14]

Superstar selections[]

The 2006 World Wrestling Entertainment (WWE) Brand Extension Draft took place from the Tacoma Dome in Tacoma, Washington on May 29, 2006, where ECW representative, Paul Heyman, drafted two superstars, one from SmackDown! and one from Raw onto the newly created ECW brand.[15][16]

Pick # Brand (to) Employee
(Real name)[1]
Role Brand (from)
1 ECW Rob Van Dam
(Robert Szatkowski)
Male wrestler Raw
2 ECW Kurt Angle Male wrestler SmackDown!

Aftermath[]

In late 2007, SmackDown! and ECW superstars began to appear on each others shows as part of a (kayfabe) deal between then-ECW General Manager Armando Estrada and then-SmackDown General Manager Vickie Guerrero.[17]

In addition to the Talent Exchange between SmackDown and ECW, an exchange between Raw and ECW was announced in September 2008.[18]

On February 2, 2010, WWE Chairman Vince McMahon announced that ECW would air its final episode on February 16, 2010.[19] The ECW brand was disbanded after the final show, with every ECW wrestler becoming a free agent and eligible to join either the Raw or SmackDown brands.[20] ECW's televised program was replaced in its slot with WWE NXT, a new weekly program what McMahon described as "the next evolution of WWE; the next evolution of television history."[19]

Impact[]

Interbrand competition[]

Interbrand competition was kept to a minimum, with superstars from all brands competing together only at pay-per-view events. However, in 2003, all pay per view events became brand exclusive, leaving the "big four" pay-per-views (WrestleMania, SummerSlam, Survivor Series, and the Royal Rumble) as the only interbrand shows.[21]

Starting in late 2006, in an attempt to add more star power to the shows, interbrand matches became more common. Most notably, MNM and The Hardys reformed, despite the fact that the teammates were on separate brands.[22] Bobby Lashley is also notable for his interbrand action, who was involved in a storyline with the WWE Chairman, Vince McMahon.[23][24] The return of Saturday Night's Main Event to NBC also led to more interaction between the brands.[25]

Starting in April 2007 with Backlash, all pay-per-views now feature all the brands as they originally were in 2002.[21]

Pay-per-views[]

The separation of the WWE roster between two brands also intended to split the pay-per-view offerings, which began with Bad Blood in June 2003.[26] The original idea had the "major" pay-per-view events at the time (Royal Rumble, SummerSlam, Survivor Series, and WrestleMania) would contain the only instances where wrestlers from different brands would interact with each other, and even among the four shows only the Royal Rumble and WrestleMania would have wrestlers from different brands competing against each other. Wrestlers, as a result, appeared only in two-thirds of the shows in a given year, and thus appeared in fewer shows compared to before the brand extension. With single-brand PPVs in place, WWE was able to add more pay-per-view events to their offerings, such as Taboo Tuesday/Cyber Sunday, New Year's Revolution, December to Dismember, and The Great American Bash. Eventually, WWE abandoned the practice of single-brand pay-per-view events following WrestleMania 23.[27] December to Dismember and New Year's Revolution were cancelled following the announcement.

Championships[]

Initially, the WWE Undisputed Championship and WWE Women's Championship were available to both brands.[8][9][11] The other championships were exclusive to the brand the champion was a part of.[8][9][11] With several specialty championships being exclusive to one brand, numerous wrestlers were left with no title to fight for.

This issue was corrected in September 2002 when the Undisputed Championship became the WWE Championship again and was moved to SmackDown! while Eric Bischoff created the World Heavyweight Championship for Raw.[28] Shortly thereafter, SmackDown! created their own Tag Team Championship, revived the United States Championship, and became the exclusive home of the Cruiserweight Championship.[29][30][31] Meanwhile Raw became the exclusive brand for WWE's original World Tag Team Championship, the Intercontinental Championship, and the Women's Championship.[29][30] The end result was each brand having four championships. When ECW was revived in 2006, the ECW World Heavyweight Championship was reactivated.[32] The United States Championship and WWE Tag Team Championships were able to be shared between SmackDown and ECW following a talent exchange agreement between the two brands, which meant that SmackDown superstars could appear on ECW and vice versa. In July 2008, the WWE Divas Championship was created on SmackDown, allowing the SmackDown Divas to compete for a title. Following a talent exchange agreement between Raw and ECW made in September 2008, the World Tag Team Championship was also eligible to be shared between Raw and ECW, as seen when John Morrison and The Miz beat CM Punk and Kofi Kingston to become new World Tag Team Champions. John Morrison and The Miz appeared more frequently on the SmackDown brand during the course of their reign as World Tag Team Champions, moving to a feud with reigning WWE Tag Team Champions of SmackDown, brothers Carlito and Primo Colon. The teams fought several non-title and title bouts for their respective brands' tag team championships before the two fought in a winner take all title unification lumberjack match at WrestleMania XXV. Carlito and Primo would go on to win the contest, forming the Unified WWE Tag Team Championship. Neither tag title however has been retired, instead by unification the titles are defended together as one across all WWE brands, with their histories remaining separate. The World Tag Team Championship was eventually retired on the August 16 episode of Raw, with a brand new WWE Tag Team Championship belt design introduced.

References[]

  1. 1.0 1.1 1.2 1.3 "WWE Entertainment To Make RAW and SMACKDOWN Distinct Television Brands". http://corporate.wwe.com/news/2002/2002_03_27.jsp. 
  2. Zimmerman, Christopher. "WWF Raw (November 19, 2002) Results". The Other Arena. Archived from the original on 2008-03-15. http://web.archive.org/web/20080315121629/http://www.otherarena.com/htm/cgi-bin/history.cgi?2001/raw111901. Retrieved 2008-02-22. 
  3. 3.0 3.1 3.2 3.3 Zimmerman, Christopher. "WWF Raw Results (March 11, 2002)". The Other Arena. Archived from the original on 2008-03-15. http://web.archive.org/web/20080315121645/http://www.otherarena.com/htm/cgi-bin/history.cgi?2002/raw031102. Retrieved 2008-02-22. 
  4. 4.0 4.1 "WWF Raw (March 11, 2002) Results". Online World of Wrestling. http://www.onlineworldofwrestling.com/results/raw/020311.html. Retrieved 2008-02-23. 
  5. McAvennie, Michael (2003). "WWE The Yearbook: 2003 Edition". Pocket Books. pp. 99 & 100. 
  6. "WWF Raw (March 18, 2002) Results". The Other Arena. Archived from the original on 2008-03-15. http://web.archive.org/web/20080315121657/http://www.otherarena.com/htm/cgi-bin/history.cgi?2002/raw031802. Retrieved 2008-02-22. 
  7. Michael McAvennie (2003). "WWE The Yearbook: 2003 Edition". Pocket Books. pp. 102. 
  8. 8.0 8.1 8.2 8.3 8.4 8.5 8.6 8.7 8.8 Zimmerman, Christopher (2002-03-26). "WWF Draft 2002 Recap". http://www.oowrestling.com/recaps/raw/20020325.shtml. Retrieved 2008-02-23. 
  9. 9.0 9.1 9.2 9.3 9.4 9.5 9.6 9.7 "WWF Raw (March 25, 2001) Results". Online World of Wrestling. http://www.onlineworldofwrestling.com/results/raw/020325.html. Retrieved 2008-02-23.  Cite error: Invalid <ref> tag; name "Draftresults2" defined multiple times with different content
  10. 10.0 10.1 10.2 10.3 10.4 10.5 "WWF 2002 Draft Results". PWWEW.net. http://www.pwwew.net/wwfdraft.htm. Retrieved 2008-02-23. 
  11. 11.0 11.1 11.2 11.3 11.4 11.5 "WWF Raw (March 25, 2001) Results". PWWEW.net. http://www.pwwew.net/tv/020325.htm. Retrieved 2008-02-23.  [dead link]
  12. "WWE Raw (June 10, 2002) Results". Archived from the original on 2008-03-15. http://web.archive.org/web/20080315121702/http://www.otherarena.com/htm/cgi-bin/history.cgi?2002/raw061002. Retrieved 2008-02-22. 
  13. 13.0 13.1 Cohen, Eric. "Top Ten Moments of WWE in 2005". About: Pro Wrestling. http://prowrestling.about.com/od/2005/tp/2005topstories.htm. Retrieved 2008-02-23. 
  14. 14.0 14.1 "WWE Launches ECW As Third Brand". http://corporate.wwe.com/news/2006/2006_05_25_02.jsp. 
  15. Williams III, Ed (2006-05-29). "Heyman gets Draft picks". World Wrestling Entertainment. http://www.wwe.com/shows/raw/archive/05292006/articles/heymangetspicks. Retrieved 2008-02-23. 
  16. Williams III, Ed (2006-05-29). "Will Triple H join the Mr.McMahon Kiss my Ass club". World Wrestling Entertainment. http://www.wwe.com/shows/raw/archive/05292006/. Retrieved 2008-02-23. 
  17. Dee, Louie (2007-10-18). "Even Exchange?". World Wrestling Entertainment. http://www.wwe.com/shows/smackdown/archive/10192007/articles/evenexchange. Retrieved 2008-02-23. 
  18. Sitterson, Aubrey (2008-09-08). "Dangerous liaisons". World Wrestling Entertainment. http://www.wwe.com/shows/raw/archive/09082008/. Retrieved 2008-02-23. 
  19. 19.0 19.1 Caldwell, James (2010-02-05). "WWE Officially Announces NXT's Debut Date Replacing ECW, Only Two Episodes Remaining". Pro Wrestling Torch. http://pwtorch.com/artman2/publish/WWE_News_3/article_38772.shtml. Retrieved 2010-02-09. 
  20. Adkins, Greg (2010-02-08). "Raw's pit stomp". World Wrestling Entertainment. http://www.wwe.com/shows/raw/results/. Retrieved 2010-02-09. 
  21. 21.0 21.1 "WWE Pay-Per-Views to follow WrestleMania formula". World Wrestling Entertainment Corporate. http://corporate.wwe.com/news/2007/2007_03_14.jsp. Retrieved 2008-02-23. 
  22. Dee, Louie (2006-11-27). "R-K-Anarchy". World Wrestling Entertainment. http://www.wwe.com/shows/raw/archive/11272006/. Retrieved 2008-02-23. 
  23. Tell, Craig (2007-04-03). "Fatal Fallout". World Wrestling Entertainment. http://www.wwe.com/shows/ecw/archive/04032007/. Retrieved 2008-02-23. 
  24. Hunt, Jen (2007-02-27). "Superstar's React to Trump's choice". World Wrestling Entertainment. http://www.wwe.com/shows/wrestlemania/history/wrestlemania23/exclusives/409017211. Retrieved 2008-02-23. 
  25. "WWE Returns to NBC with Saturday Night's Main Event". World Wrestling Entertainment Corporate. 2006-02-22. http://corporate.wwe.com/news/2006/2006_02_22.jsp. Retrieved 2008-02-23. 
  26. Powell, John. "Bad Blood Just Plain Bad". Canoe: SLAM! Wrestling. http://slam.canoe.ca/Slam/Wrestling/2003/06/16/112594.html. Retrieved 2008-02-23. 
  27. "WWE Pay-Per-Views To Follow WrestleMania Formula". http://corporate.wwe.com/news/2007/2007_03_14.jsp. 
  28. "Triple H's first World Heavyweight Championship reign". World Wrestling Entertainment. http://www.wwe.com/inside/titlehistory/worldheavyweight/3044541431. Retrieved 2008-02-23. 
  29. 29.0 29.1 "WWE Tag Team Championship History". World Wrestling Entertainment. http://www.wwe.com/inside/titlehistory/wwetag/. Retrieved 2008-02-23. 
  30. 30.0 30.1 "WWE United States' Championship History". World Wrestling Entertainment. http://www.wwe.com/inside/titlehistory/unitedstates/. Retrieved 2008-02-23. 
  31. "WWE Cruiserweight Championship History". World Wrestling Entertainment. http://www.wwe.com/inside/titlehistory/cruiser/. Retrieved 2008-02-23. 
  32. "Rob Van Dam's first ECW Championship reign". World Wrestling Entertainment. http://www.wwe.com/shows/ecw/history/ecwchampionship/061506rvd. Retrieved 2008-02-23. 

See also[]

Template:Extreme Championship Wrestling

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