Top Gear presenter Jeremy Clarkson’s contract will not be renewed after a BBC investigation found he launched an “unprovoked physical and verbal attack” that left one of the show’s producers in hospital.

Director-general Tony Hall said the decision had been taken with “great regret” but that Clarkson’s attack on show producer Oisin Tymon meant “a line has been crossed”.

He said: “It is not a decision I have taken lightly.”

Top Gear producer Oisin Tymon, the man allegedly punched by Clarkson (BBC Worldwide/PA)
Top Gear producer Oisin Tymon, the man allegedly punched by Clarkson (BBC Worldwide/PA)

Clarkson has been suspended from the hit motoring show for more than two weeks since he was involved in what the BBC called a “fracas” with Tymon.

Mr Hall, who said he had met and spoken to both men, said the BBC needed “distinctive and different voices” but not “at any price”.

He said: “Common to all at the BBC have to be standards of decency and respect.

“I cannot condone what has happened on this occasion. A member of staff – who is a completely innocent party – took himself to accident and emergency after a physical altercation accompanied by sustained and prolonged verbal abuse of an extreme nature.

Top Gear.
Clarkson hosted Top Gear with Richard Hammond and James May (BBC)

“For me a line has been crossed. There cannot be one rule for one and one rule for another dictated by either rank, or public relations and commercial considerations.”

The BBC investigation found Mr Tymon was “subject to an unprovoked physical and verbal attack by Jeremy Clarkson”.

It said the attack lasted around 30 seconds and only stopped when a witness intervened.

The report said “verbal abuse was directed at Oisin Tymon on more than one occasion – both during the attack and subsequently inside the hotel – and contained the strongest expletives and threats to sack him. The abuse was at such volume as to be heard in the dining room, and the shouting was audible in a hotel bedroom.”

Mr Hall said “no blame” was attached to Mr Tymon, who, he said, “behaved with huge integrity throughout”.

He added that the BBC would look to “renew” the show for next year.

Top Gear
The fate of Top Gear co-stars James May and Richard Hammond is unclear (BBC)

Clarkson and his co-hosts, James May and Richard Hammond, were scheduled to take part in four live Top Gear shows in Norway this week, but it was announced on Sunday that they had been postponed.

All three men’s contracts run out at the end of this month but Hammond and May’s future is still unclear.

The BBC report said Mr Tymon, who “believed that he had lost his job” after the attack, drove himself to a “nearby A&E department for examination”.

It added that Clarkson “made a number of attempts to apologise” to Mr Tymon “by way of text, email and in person”.

Clarkson has changed his Twitter profile to: “I used to be a presenter on the BBC2 motoring show, Top Gear”.