This is why we like Jeremy Clarkson very, very much....
Saturday, 23 September 2006
Extract from Jeremy Clarkson's column in the Sun newspaper.
'Richard is winning his fight' By JEREMY CLARKSON - The Sun © SEPTEMBER 23, 2006
In the wee small hours of Thursday night, just 30 hours after what is
almost certainly the world’s fastest ever car crash, Richard Hammond
suddenly sat up in bed, opened his eyes and asked what had happened.
“You’ve been in a car accident,” I said. “Was I driving like a tw*t?”
he asked, before getting out of bed and walking, shakily, to the
lavatory.
His wife, Mindy, couldn’t believe her eyes. None of us could. It really
did seem that he’d had a look through death’s door and decided he
didn’t like what he saw on the other side.
Later, he looked across at James May and said: “Hello C**k face.”
Despite all the odds, it seemed we’d got our Hamster back . . .
Two years ago, Richard Hammond, James May and I agreed on a plan of
action should one of us be killed while making our show, Top Gear.
We decided that after the announcement of the death was made in the following week’s show, the next word should be “anyway”.
So if the Hamster had ever careered through the Pearly Gates in a
flaming 200mph fireball, I would put on a sombre face, say that Richard
Hammond had died and then, after a small pause, say: “Anyway, the new
Jag . . .”
It was a sort of joke. But then this week, it sort of wasn’t.
The idea to drive a jet car actually came from Hammond. He skedaddled
into the office one day and, bubbling with his trademark enthusiasm,
said: “Hey, why don’t we go somewhere and drive really fast? I don’t
mean supercar fast. I mean REALLY fast.”
We all liked the idea. But what we liked even more was the idea of James May being given the assignment.
James is known to his fans as Captain Slow. He thinks dawdling is
reckless and practises the art of what he calls “Christian Motoring”.
Mostly, this involves letting people out of side turnings and generally
being Edwardian.
Putting him, and that ’70s barnet, in a 370mph jet car was a bit like putting just Jane Austen at the helm of a space shuttle.
Immediately, James discovered a prior engagement and said he couldn’t
go. I, meanwhile, decided that I spent most of my thirties upside down
in jet fighters and helicopter gunships, vomiting, and that these days
I was far too fat.
That left Hammond, who was bouncing around like the donkey in Shrek shouting, “Pick me. Pick me”.
And so we did.
Today, people who have absolutely no idea at all of how television
works, (Yes, columnist Neil Lyndon — that’s you, you sanctimonious,
rent-a-soundbite little t**d) are saying that our producers push us to
do more and more dangerous stunts in a bid for ratings.
Rubbish. Our producers spend their whole lives filling in health and safety forms and asking “are you sure?”
It’s the presenters who come up with the hare-brained ideas and
trans-continental races . . . not the backroom boys or the suits.
The car Hammond was set to drive is called the Vampire. It’s powered by
a Rolls- Royce Orpheus jet engine — as used by the Red Arrows — and
currently holds the British land speed record of 300.3mph.
I know one bloke who has driven it and he said simply: “It was brilliant. Although I did fill my pants.”
So, the day before his fateful encounter, I shook Hammond’s hand and said “goodbye”.
“I’ll probably be killed,” he joked with a huge, beaming smile. “Anyway . . .”
He knew that he was embarking on a dangerous mission. And this is what
no one seems to understand. He was looking forward to it. He likes the
buzz.
He also knew that in Top Gear’s 28-year history, no one on the show has
ever been hurt. Not even Ray Mears can claim that. Or Anthea Turner or
even Janet Ellis.
Right now no one knows for sure what caused the accident. Film footage
seems to point the finger of blame at a tyre. And that’s something you
can’t prepare for.
The tyres were from a Nascar racer in America, chosen specifically
because they have super-stiff side walls. But it does seem that one of
them burst.
How fast was Richard going? Well on the run before, he’d reached
315mph. So it’s likely he’d hit that speed again. Richard isn’t the
sort of man who goes backwards. If he thought he’d done 315, he’d be
trying to do 317. Or 320. Or five million if he’d thought there was
half a chance.
People with beards and dirty fingernails are now saying he should never
have been in that car, doing that kind of speed. They make out it’s all
terribly complicated and that you need years of practice.
Rubbish. From what I understand, you sit there, you push a lever to
light the afterburner and you then push another to shut off the fuel
supply — it runs on heating oil — and deploy the parachutes. A hamster
could do it. In fact, a hamster did.
Of course, behind the scenes, there was a small army of people making
sure all went well. The Vampire team had even brought along a device to
measure wind speed. Nothing that could be left to chance had been left
to chance. But chance itself was still sitting there, waiting to bite.
As the car began its series of sickening rolls, at a speed that boggles
the mind, Richard’s head was taking a ferocious pounding as his helmet
smashed into the protective steel cage.
That was bad, but inside his body things were worse. He will have been
subjected to maybe 100g. This means his brain will have weighed 71
stone. And it was rolling around inside his head at 300 revs per minute.
He landed upside-down, with his helmet, full of soil, buried in the
earth. Amazingly, he was alive. And more than that, after a few minutes
of unconsciousness, he was lucid.
“I want to do a piece to camera”, he told the crew. He even fought the
ambulancemen, who said he couldn’t. No surprises there. Richard likes
fighting. He does it a lot.
When I first heard of the crash, I was doing a rather miserable 175mph
in an Aston Martin at our test track in Surrey. Everyone was quite
upbeat. He didn’t appear to be badly hurt. So I carried on driving
round corners a little too quickly while shouting. I even went out for
dinner with friends that night.
But later it became apparent that Richard was much more seriously
injured than we’d thought. Doctors described his condition as critical.
At the hospital, his wife Mindy was being a star. She’s one of those
women who takes things in her stride but this was something else. She
was laughing. She was joking.
She’d told daughters Willow and Izzy that Daddy had crashed another car
and messed up his clothes. So she was taking him some clean ones.
Richard had a bad night. At four he was giving very serious cause for
concern but as the sun rose, he’d rallied a bit.
He didn’t look very “rallied” to me. In fact, he looked like a Klingon,
with a massively swollen eye and a huge lump on his forehead. The only
good news, so far as I could see, was that his teeth were still as
shiny and bright as ever.
It’s genuinely hard to know how Mindy could be so upbeat when her
husband was so badly dented. They’d just exchanged contracts on a new
house. They were about to take out a joint mortgage. And yet, she was
still cheerful. James May and I weren’t. May even admits to having been
“a bit unmanly” at one point.
There’s one thing though. All we ever hear about the NHS is that it’s
rubbish. But anyone who ever experiences the emergency care it provides
always notices just how un-rubbish it is in reality.
Leeds General Infirmary is a no star hospital. According to the
bureaucrats, it’s terrible. But trust me on this. From where Richard
Hammond was lying, it was about as terrible as Angelina Jolie’s left
breast.
They were coping brilliantly with a forest of flowers being sent by
well wishers. “They’re lovely,” said Mindy, and then, after a pause . .
. “Do you think anyone will send cash donations?” Outside, in the real
world, one internet site had raised £4,000 for the air ambulance
that had saved Richard’s life. Sky News was deluged with thousands of
goodwill messages. The Sun received messages from all over the world.
And there was some hope. While James was leaning over, whispering to
our bashed-up friend, Mindy started to stroke his hair and I noticed
the hamster’s heart rate had shot up from 60 to 75 beats per minute.
“Christ, James. He thinks you’re doing the stroking,” I yelled.
Quickly, the heart beat settled down again. Then came the moment when I
said: “The reason you’re here mate is because you’re a c**p driver.”
And he smiled.
I knew then that he was going to pull through. And God it was a relief.
You can never tell after a brain injury what long-term implications
there might be. He might have no sense of taste, or double vision. His
teeth may go brown. Or he may be absolutely fine.
The only thing I knew was this: he was going to live.
And the next day after he said, “Hello C**kface” to James May, it looked like he might just win back everything else as well.
You’d think that the joyous news would silence the vultures circling
the crash site since the accident, rejoicing in the fact that Top Gear
had finally been taught its lesson that speed kills.
Somehow I doubt it though. The campaign to have us taken off the air —
sparked curiously, by the BBC’s own news website — will now be ramped
up, fuelled by the environmentalists and spearheaded by muddle-headed
road safety campaigners.
Richard is winning his fight. And now mine begins. To make sure that he has a show to come back to.
The Sun © SEPTEMBER 23, 2006