BattleFrog College Championship Genre Sports Written by Tom Davis, Danny Llewelyn, Ron Luscinski Directed by Ron Luscinski Country of origin United States Original language English No. of seasons1 No. of episodes3 Executive producers Ron Luscinski, Danny Llewelyn, Tom Davis, Michael McAllister, Carlos Centurion and Leo Fernandez Production location Orlando, Florida Cinematography Matthias Schubert Editor Nikki Fabery de Jonge Running time 180 minutes Production company '51 Dons Network ESPN2 , ESPNU
BattleFrog College Championship was a sports competition television series directed by Ron Luscinski and written by Luscinski, Tom Davis, and Danny Llewelyn.
Hosted by Ron Pitts , sportscaster and former NFL cornerback , and Evan Dollard , from American Ninja Warrior and American Gladiators , BattleFrog College Championship showcases 16 co-ed rival college teams competing for a national championship and academic scholarships on the ultimate sprint track obstacle course built by Navy Seals ; this single-elimination competition was a 350-meter, four-person relay with over 20 obstacles testing the competitors' strength, speed, and endurance.[ 1] [ 2]
The competing colleges for season one included: Syracuse , Texas A&M , Penn State , the N.C. State Triathlon Club , Army , Alabama , Florida , Illinois , Kentucky , Miami (FL) , Michigan , Ole Miss , USC , Virginia , Wisconsin and Virginia Tech .[ 3] [ 4] [ 5] [ 6] [ 7] [ 8]
The three-episode series premiered on June 9, 2015,[ 9] in the United States on ESPN2 . Following its U.S. release, the series aired in Australia, New Zealand, Japan and Latin America .
As of August 2016, BattleFrog announced that they were closing their business.[ 10] [ 11]
Production
Casting for 64 athletes from 16 U.S. colleges began in September 2014. Competitors were selected based on their GPA and athletic performance. Filming commenced in Spring 2015 in Orlando, Florida , at Rock on Adventures Ranch alongside the BattleFrog obstacle race series Central Florida festival. Acclaimed sportscaster Ron Pitts and two-time American Ninja Warrior finalist Evan Dollard hosted the three-day single-elimination competition with sideline reporters, Emily Reppert from Fox Sports Southwest and Shawn Ramirez, two-time crossfit winner.
The series was produced by '51 Dons Film, LLC, and BattleFrog Obstacle Race series, and distributed by ESPN networks.[ 12]
Season One Obstacles (2015)
Obstacle #
Obstacle Name
1
16' Ladder
2
3' Hump Overs
3
18' Cargo Crawl
4
Rolling Log
5
6' Over/Under/Thru
6
6' Inverted Wall
7
Balance/Carry
8
Angled Wall
9
Dirty Name
10
12' Rope Climb
11
McMurdo Station
12
4 Step Beams
13
Delta Ladder
14
Lily Pads
15
12' Rope Wall
16
Log Crawl
17
Wedge Donovan
18
Monkey Bars
19
Tsunami
20
Normandy Jacks
Season One (2015)
Season One Competitors
School
Male Competitor 1
Male Competitor 2
Female Competitor 1
Female Competitor 2
Team Manager
Army
Daniel Camacho
David Ochs Jr.
Kayla Carpenter
Nicole Heavirland
Tyree Meadows
Alabama
John White
Taylor Wood
Shelby Akin
Monica Vermillion
Travis Taylor
Florida
Erik Petrick
Jacob Tyer
Katie Alt
Reilly Sullivan
Alfie Sharp
Illinois
David Alberts
Seth Lankford
Leya Allind
Halie Kastl
Kentucky
Cameron Cristofoli
Noah Gawthrop
Morgan Collins
Madison Smith
Jordan Burgess
Miami (FL)
Steven De Nicola
Adam O'Reilly
Alison Scudds
Leah Vertullo
Michigan
John Pavletic
Eli Zucker
Camden Burk
Cassandra Gardner
Ellen Dixon
Ole Miss
Joshua Brenc
Jack Coffin
Kim Duff
Emily Lewis
N.C. State
Zachary Leonard
Robert Maughan
Julianna Falzon
Danielle Smith
Charlie Lambrecht
Penn State
Charles Ackerman
Ryan Kalkbrenner
Katharine Ferster
Haley Schlechter
Katherine Sparks
USC
Corey Norris
Brian Zukotynski
Marilyn Crowley
Leora Mitzner
Kayla Howard-Anderson
Syracuse
Frank Fuentes Jr.
Elias Hubbard
Danielle Gehman
Katherine Roskoff
Jordan Peters
Texas A&M
Calvin Fusilier
David Tolstyka
Rebecca Hetu
Sarah Pledger
Virginia
Greg Coffin
Michael Pender
Katya Davydova
Mira Korb
Wisconsin
Sterling Chapin
Matthew Koester
Kimberly Kirt
Cassandra Visintainer
Aaron Hobson
Virginia Tech
Blake Armstrong
Shane Wescott
Corinna Coffin
Anna Taggart
Kevin Righi
Season One Championship (2015)
The Army team won the coveted trident cup and academic scholarships.
Season One Championship
Seed
Team
Time
1
Army
02:13.9
2
Ole Miss
02:20.4
Season One Stats (2015)
Reception
BattleFrog College Championship premiered episode one, First Round on ESPN2 , Tuesday, June 9, 2015,[ 13] in primetime to a critically receptive audience.[ 14] Episodes two [ 15] and three subsequently aired in primetime on June 10 and 11, 2015. Following its premiere, season one aired 9 times nationally in the U.S. on ESPN Networks [ 16] and internationally in Australia , New Zealand , Japan and Latin America . BattleFrog College Championship season one drew over two million viewers in the first week and garnered a strong fan-base making season two a highly anticipated program for 2016.[ 17] [ 18] [ 19]
On December 4, 2015, BattleFrog Obstacle Race Series was announced as the new title sponsor of college football's Fiesta Bowl , beginning with the January 2016 game.[ 20]
References
↑ BattleFrog College Championship to Air on ESPN Networks, June 5, 2015, Retrieved September 2015, Dan Curran
↑ "BattleFrog College Championships: A Look Into the Competition, June 17, 2015, Retrieved September 2015" . Archived from the original on September 14, 2015. Retrieved September 4, 2015 .
↑ Ole Miss Finishes Second in BattleFrog College Championship, June 12, 2015, Retrieved September 2015, Callie Daniels
↑ UM Students to Compete in National BattleFrog Collegiate Championship, February 4, 2014, Retrieved September 2015, Michael Piacentino
↑ Wisconsin Students Compete in BattleFrog College Championship on ESPN2, June 8, 2015, Retrieved September 2015 Archived September 6, 2015, at the Wayback Machine
↑ "Triathlon Club featured in Inaugural Collegiate Obstacle Race, May 29, 2015, Retrieved September 2015, Adam Sardinha" . Archived from the original on September 15, 2015. Retrieved September 4, 2015 .
↑ "Spring Break? Not for Students Headed to BattleFrog, February 4, 2015, Retrieved September 2015, Mike Piacentino" . Archived from the original on May 16, 2015. Retrieved September 4, 2015 .
↑ Scudds to appear on ESPN broadcast, June 9, 2015, Retrieved September 2015, Bellefontaine Examiner
↑ Direct TV, June 2015, Retrieved September 2015
↑ Afana, Dana (August 23, 2016). "BattleFrog cancels Michigan obstacle race four days before run" . MLive.com . Retrieved February 3, 2017 .
↑ Davis, Matt (August 23, 2016). "BattleFrog cancels all races" . obstacleracingmedia.com . Retrieved February 3, 2017 .
↑ BattleFrog on ESPN: Welcome to the Sport of Obstacle Racing, June 10, 2015, Retrieved September 2015, Margaret Schlachter
↑ TV Palace, June 7, 2015, Retrieved September 2015
↑ Obstacle Racing Media, June 10, 2015, Retrieved September 2015, Matt B. Davis
↑ Obstacle Racing Media, June 11, 2015, Retrieved September 2015, Matt B. Davis
↑ Obstacle Course Race Championship, June 2015, Retrieved September 2015
↑ BattleFrog® Announces U.S. West Coast & Canadian Expansion, August 21, 2015, Retrieved September 2015
↑ BattleFrog on TV...Here We Go Again, June 10, 2015, Retrieved September 2015, John Wall [permanent dead link ]
↑ "BattleFrog College Championship: 6 Ways the Short Form Race Will Change OCR, June 22, 2015, Retrieved September 2015" . Archived from the original on October 17, 2015. Retrieved September 4, 2015 .
↑ "BattleFrog Announced as Title Sponsor of 45th Annual Fiesta Bowl" (Press release). Fiesta Bowl. December 4, 2015. Archived from the original on December 8, 2015. Retrieved December 31, 2015 .
External links