Villagers said they'd be thrilled if Jeremy Clarkson bought their local pub amid rumours the former Top Gear star is planning a purchase.
Council insiders have reportedly said the 63-year-old is interested in buying the Grade II listed Coach & Horses Inn, near Bourton-on-the-Water.
Today (Tuesday, April 10) locals said he'd be welcome to move into the pub which is near the brewery where Clarkson's Hawkstone Lager is produced.
It uses barley grown on the presenter's Diddly Squat farm in Oxfordshire.
Tom Carty, 37, who is manager of the Willow Pub in Bourton-on-the-Water said: "It will be good for the village.
"He's a very high profile character.
"In this area, we are always looking for more reasons for tourists to come and if this brings more tourists in this direction that is a good thing.
"From my point of view, it's more positive than negative.
"There have been rumours for months about that site being purchased by Jeremy Clarkson.
"I don't know what's happened but it looks like he's back on the hunt for it.
"The pub would suit him really well; it's opposite his brewery so why wouldn't you want a site like that?"
The pub, named the Coach and Horses, sits on a main road and used to be an Indian Restaurant, which was popular with locals.
Slav Wiswieski, 41, the assistant manager of the Willow Pub who lives in Bourton-on-the-Water said it used to be the "best Indian restaurant in the village" before it shut last year.
"It used to be open until late, and they used to do a British Sunday carvery even though it was Indian," he said.
"I knew the people who ran it, they were very friendly and polite.
"There would always be something extra if you ordered anything.
"Great customer service and the food would be absolutely delicious there as well."
He said that he hopes Jeremy Clarkson buys the pub and added: "I reckon Jeremy Clarkson buying the pub would bring much more to the village because of the name, obviously.
"He already has this teepee close by and that one is absolutely brilliant as well and when it is nice weather people sit outside with live music and food trucks.
"He's running a good business and there's massive opportunity there."
However, some residents have expressed concern at the number of tourists the new pub attract, and whether there would be enough room for them to park.
"I suppose the only concern you would think is obviously the car aspect - he would just have to do it right," said Rachel Heath, 52, director of Cotswold China and Cookware, from Chipping Norton.
"I suppose he's got carparking across the road at the brewery so if the small carpark filled he could re-route people over the road - it's not that far away.
"I think it's great and I think it will be good for the area and great for his brewery, but it is only a small carpark at that pub and I think he personally would attract a lot of people so he would have to make sure carparking is sorted, but he probably can sort it as [the carpark] is over the road [from the pub]."
Younger residents of Bourton are also excited at the prospect of the pub re-opening.
Izzy Jordan, 22, a bartender at the Old Manse who lives in Bourton said everyone used to go to the Coach and Horses because it would stay open the latest.
"It's been closed since September," she said.
"You could go out later there and it would be good for young people.
"The latest pub at the moment is open until 11pm so it's not good for young people around here really.
"It would be nice to have somewhere to go other than just going home.
"I used to go there with my boyfriend for dinner. It was really nice with really good food."
Grace Moeller, 22, who works with Izzy, added: "If it opened up again, it would be really good and we would definitely go again.
"Everyone would get out for live music - that would be really good.
"Music nights would be good. I don't think there would be many complaints because it's quite far away."
Ashleigh Rainbow, 21, who works as bar staff at the Duke of Wellington pub and lives in Bourton agrees.
"I do enjoy going on local pub crawls around here, and I heard the brewery is doing really well so I probably would visit his pub," she said.
"I think people would enjoy somewhere else to go because we're all quite used to these pubs at the moment."
The Grand Tour presenter had plans to build a restaurant at his Diddly Squat Farm 15 miles away near Chipping Norton rejected by both West Oxfordshire District Council and at appeal by a planning inspector.
The former Top Gear host has been the star of Prime Video’s hit show Clarkson’s Farm since its release in 2020.
Now into its third season, the series is set at Diddle Squat Farm near Chipping Norton.
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