James May says BBC 'didn't need' to axe Jeremy Clarkson after Top Gear fight

James May says BBC 'didn't need' to axe Jeremy Clarkson after Top Gear fight

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James May says BBC 'didn't need' to axe Jeremy Clarkson after Top Gear fight
Author: Jacob Stolworthy
Published: Jan, 31 2025 09:52

‘I thought it was very unfortunate,’ presenter said. James May has hit out at the BBC for dropping Jeremy Clarkson from Top Gear when it did. May first started working with Clarkson and Richard Hammond on the BBC’s motoring show in 2002, and they moved over to Amazon for Prime Video series The Grand Tour after an on-set “fracas” in 2015,. The altercation saw the presenter allegedly punch producer Oisin Tymon, which led to Clarkson’s tenure at the corporation coming to an end.

 [Jeremy Clarkson was dropped by the BBC in 2015]
Image Credit: The Independent [Jeremy Clarkson was dropped by the BBC in 2015]

An investigation was launched and, in solidarity with their co-host, May and Hammond refused to sign a new contract, which brought the show in its most successful form to a close. May has now reflected on the turn of events, revealing that he didn’t think their time on Top Gear “had to end because of” the fight. “I think it could have been patched up and put down to a bit of high stress and flightiness, to be honest. It happened. It’s regrettable and it’s unfortunate, but it didn’t need to lead to the collapse of something very successful.”.

 [James May on ‘The Grand Tour’]
Image Credit: The Independent [James May on ‘The Grand Tour’]

May continued: “Maybe these things are ordained and it was time for us to move on. We had been doing it by then for a decade, I think.”. Clarkson was reportedly left annoyed that he could not order hot food while he and fellow cast and crew members were filming at Simonstone Hall Hotel near Hawes, North Yorkshire. “I mean, without being big-headed about it, we were Top Gear and we were one of the biggest TV shows in the world at the time,” May said.

“It was quite an intense environment and it’s not entirely surprising that it occasionally went off the rails.”. May recently explained why his TV partnership with Clarkson and Hammond came to an end with the Grand Tour finale. He said: “The idea was to land the car show format safely and not fly it into a cliff. We only cleared the cliff by a few feet but I think it will survive.”. May also said he isn’t “in mourning” as he thinks they “gave the format a really good thrashing and now it’s time to let a younger generation have a go”.

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