The third series of Gladiators began airing on Seven Network on 13 April 1996.
Twenty four episodes were filmed at the Brisbane Entertainment Centre in December 1995, including three three-part specials.
The series was once again presented by Kimberley Joseph and Mike Hammond with Tony Schibeci as commentator, Mike Whitney as referee, John Forsyth as assistant referee and the Kix cheerleaders performed in the background of the events. Forsyth also acted as a stand-in referee in Quarter-finals 1 and 2 after Mike Whitney caught a stomach bug virus, and Forsyth's position as assistant referee was taken over by Neil Waldron because of this.
The third series suffered a slight decline in viewing figures and due to an increase in costs, production on the fourth series was halted until the revival in 2008.
Predator suffered an injury in Heat 4 and was sidelined for the rest of the series. Taipan missed a number of episodes due to a knee injury and was only able to play in non-contact games like Hang Tough, Joust and Swing Shot.
Blade suffered an injury on Hang Tough in heat 7 when she landed on part of the arena floor not fully covered by crash mats. Whilst the fall was televised, Blade's injury was not referred to onscreen and she was sidelined until the semi-finals.
Cheeta chose to leave the show after heat 4. Due to this, reserve Gladiator, Electra was brought in though she only appeared in six episodes and never appeared in the starting credits or any publicity material. The official Australian Gladiators magazine makes no reference to her. She is married to John Forsythe, who was assistant referee, stand in referee for quarter-finals 1 and 2, and Director of training.
Atlaspheres, Duel, Gauntlet, Hang Tough, Hit & Run, Powerball, Pursuit, Pyramid, Swingshot, Suspension Bridge, Wall and Whiplash all returned. The layout of the Pursuit course was slightly changed for this series. Two new events were introduced, Skytrack and Joust, the latter of which had been recently axed in the UK series with the apparatus being shipped to Australia. Tilt which had only appeared once early on in the preceding series did not return.
A three-part individual sports athletes challenge preluded the third domestic series. Fifteen shows were filmed in a progressive competition, followed by a further two specials at the conclusion of the domestic series.
Winning challengers are in bold.
<sup>1</sup>These were the lasts appearances by Cheeta and Predator.<br /> <sup>2</sup>This was the first appearance of reserve Gladiator Electra.<br /> <sup>3</sup>Catherine Arlove was injured after Hang Tough and was unable to compete in the Eliminator. Marisa Huettner had to run the eliminator by herself against the clock. She won the series as the strongest competitor holding the fastest Eliminator time recorded in any series. <br /> <sup>4</sup>All four finalists won the right to compete for Australia in the second Ashes series in Birmingham.
Original airdate: 13 April 1996<br>Challengers: Karla Gilbert (Iron Woman) v Emma George (Pole Vaulter), Chris Fydler (Swimmer) v Peter Winters (Decathlete)
Eliminator
Original airdate: 20 April 1996<br>Challengers: Shelley Oates (Kayaker) v Nici Andronicus (Triathlete), Guy Andrews (Iron Man) v Sean Carlan (Hammer Thrower)
Eliminator
Original airdate: 27 April 1996<br>Challengers: Shelley Oates (Kayaker) v Emma George (Pole Vaulter), Guy Andrews (Iron Man) v Peter Winter (Decathlete)
Eliminator
Original airdate: 4 May 1996 <br /> Challengers: Allison Ferry v Joanne Rogers, Shane Vuletich v Wayne Neuendorf
Eliminator
Original airdate: 11 May 1996 <br /> Challengers: Liz Ruffin v Marisa Huettner, Paul Stubbs vs Sam Soliman
Eliminator
<sup>1</sup><small>Cheeta caught Liz but was disqualified by Mike Whitney for starting before the whistle</small>.
Original airdate: 18 May 1996 <br /> Challengers: Leanne Martin v Mary Kominos, Cameron Simon v Paul Reynolds
Eliminator
Original airdate: 25 May 1996 <br /> Challengers: Nicki Richards v Kylie Saunders, Jamie Rafanelli v Phil Burgess
Eliminator
<sup>1</sup> <small>Predator suffered a season-ending injury in Powerball and Vulcan was substituted in for the remainder of the game.</small>
Original airdate: 1 June 1996 <br /> Challengers: Astrid Edlinger v Catherine Arlove, Joshua McEwan v Kerry Packer
Eliminator
Original airdate: 8 June 1996 <br /> Challengers: Jacqui Drew v Christine Dale, Jeff Prewett v Gavin Wise
Eliminator
Original airdate: 15 June 1996 <br /> Challengers: Leesa Sharpe v Debbie Santic, Daniel Di Paolo v James Lenehan
Eliminator
Original airdate: 22 June 1996 <br /> Challengers: Sandra Hansen v Siobhan Skinner, Keith Hansen v Peter Cranney
Eliminator
Original airdate: 29 June 1996 <br/> Challengers: Leanne Martin v Debbie Santic, Joshua McEwan v Paul Reynolds
Eliminator
Original airdate: 6 July 1996 <br /> Challengers: Marisa Huettner v Christine Dale, Paul Stubbs v Peter Cranney
Eliminator
Original airdate: 13 July 1996 <br /> Challengers: Joanne Rogers & Catherine Arlove, Phil Burgess v Jeff Prewett
Eliminator
<sup>1</sup> <small>Fury caught Joanne early but lost her footing on the track, forcing Catherine to crash in to her. Fury was taken down and Catherine re-ran her race with Delta which she won.</small>
Original airdate: 20 July 1996 <br /> Challengers: Nicki Richards v Sandra Hansen, Shane Vuletich v James Lenehan
Eliminator
Original airdate: 27 July 1996 <br /> Challengers: Sandra Hansen v Catherine Arlove, Shane Vuletich v Paul Stubbs
Eliminator
<small><sup>1</sup> Despite appearing to hit Catherine's buzzer multiple times, no sparks appeared. Upon replay a malfunction was reported and Catherine received 0 points.<br /> <sup>2</sup> Catherine had legally hit Glacier off the bridge, however threw her hammerhead to the matts, and in a controversial ruling only scored five points. <br /> <sup>3</sup> Shane's detonator triggered despite Tornado not being remotely close to him, luckily he kept running the race to claim his ten points. <br /> <sup>4</sup> Hammer was disqualified for dropping his hammerhead.</small>
Original airdate: 3 August 1996 <br /> Challengers: Marisa Huettner v Debbie Santic, Jeff Prewett v Paul Reynolds
Eliminator
Original airdate: 10 August 1996<br>Challengers: Catherine Arlove v Marisa Huettner, Paul Reynolds v Paul Stubbs
Eliminator
<small><sup>1</sup> Storm was disqualified for holding and impeding Marisa's progress during the web trap <br /> <sup>2</sup> Despite crossing the line first for 10 points, Paul Reynolds' score was reduced to 6 for knocking over two cones<br /></small>
This was a 3-episode team event between the Australian sports teams.
Original airdate: 17 August 1996<br>Challengers:
Eliminator
Original airdate: 24 August 1996<br>Challengers:
Eliminator
Original airdate: 31 August 1996<br>Challengers:
Eliminator
<small><sup>1</sup> Storm was red-carded for attacking the challenger's head while pulling from the Wall. <br /> <sup>2</sup> In an Australian Gladiators first, both Richard and Tower fell from the bridge at exactly the same time, calling for a re-match.</small>
This was a 3-episode team event between the Australian Army and Australian Navy.
Original airdate: 7 September 1996<br>Challengers:
Eliminator
Original airdate: 14 September 1996<br>Challengers:
Eliminator
Original airdate: 21 September 1996<br>Challengers:
Eliminator
Choreographers: Davidia Lind, Simon Lind
Cheerleaders: Cintra Bedford, Jane Crichton, Jessica Emblen, Sarah Harlow, Tamra Lind, Tamara Raup, Emma Sieber, Leigh-Anne Vizer, Francene Vedelago, Kyle Watson
Production began in October 1995 following the success of series two. Recording dates were pencilled in for 11âÂÂ22 December at the Brisbane Entertainment Centre.
The Gladiators were given their specialist training schedules in October and took a break from promotional activities in November whilst the production crew started work on the new events.
Filming began in December and continued through into the new year. Seating in the Brisbane Entertainment Centre was increased to 8,000 and the arena itself had some subtle changes with darker lighting and an increased use of spotlights similar to the UK arena at the National Indoor Arena. The Arena floor was also changed to a black floor with lights, just like the UK.
A fourth series went into pre production. Pendulum, a UK event seen in the International series was to be introduced and there were events being developed that would be unique to the Australian series.
However, due to injuries, rising production costs and a slight decline in viewing figures, Channel 7 opted not to go ahead with a fourth series and after being on television for an almost constant eighteen months, Gladiators was over until its revival in 2008.