Gladiators legend Wolf claims he and his son were ‘blanked’ when they approached the BBC about being involved in the reboot of the show.
The broadcaster has revived the series with a whole new cast of Gladiators, but Wolf, real name Michael van Wijk, 71, has claimed he contacted the broadcaster to offer his services and was snubbed.
After Michaels’s run on the original series from 1992 to 2000, he said he would have liked to have seen his son his son Dean, 35, follow in his footsteps.
But says his hopes were dashed, telling the Mirror he and some of the other original Gladiators reached out to producers.
He said: ‘[We] tried to contact the BBC to say like we’d be interested in presenting, team captions, be involved in some shape or form. And none of us got even a reply. Nothing. Just completely blank.’

Gladiators legend Wolf, real name Michael van Wijk, 71 (pictured), claims he and his son were ‘blanked’ when they approached the BBC about being involved in the reboot of the show

The broadcaster has revived the series with a whole new cast of Gladiators, but Wolf has claimed he contacted the broadcaster to offer his services and was snubbed (Wolf pictured in 1995)
Michael believes the producers may have wanted to completely distance themselves from the original version of the show.
He added: ‘They didn’t even bother giving me a “no, thank you, but thank you for applying”. Nothing. A complete blank.’
The super-strong TV star went on to say his son Dean ‘wanted to take part’ but thought bosses may not have wanted the family connection.
Michael said: ‘They would have had to have introduced him as Wolf’s son, which they [probably] didn’t wanna do. They didn’t want anything to do with the old show, y’know.’
Dean previously spoke out about his desire to take part in the Gladiators reboot before it returned to screens earlier this year.
He told The Sun in 2022: ‘I’ve always wanted to wear Lycra and chase people around.’
While fitness fanatic Dean was confident he could have taken on the challenge, he knew he had big boots to fill when it comes to matching up to his father.
‘It’s a bit daunting to think about, he explained. ‘Especially because he was the number one with his character.

After Michaels’s run on the original series from 1992 to 2000, he said he would have liked to have seen his son his son Dean, 35 (pictured), follow in his footsteps

Dean (pictured) previously spoke out about his desire to take part in the Gladiators reboot before it returned to screens, saying: ‘I’ve always wanted to wear Lycra and chase people’
Dean said he got a taste for appearing on the show when he was a child after his father made him a mini lycra costume to match Wolf’s which Michael carried him on his shoulders around Birmingham’s National Indoor Arena where the programme was filmed.
In its heyday, the programme attracted 13 million viewers, with he popular 90s TV show seeing members of the public battle it out against a cast of bodybuilders and gymnasts, known as Gladiators.
It comes after Wolf gave his view of the reboot of the iconic show.
The BBC has revived the series with a whole new cast of Gladiators, but Wolf, real name Mike van Wijk, has claimed he contacted the broadcaster to offer his services and was snubbed.
The new series kicked off on January 13 with Bradley Walsh and his son Barney as hosts.
Mike, 71, told GBNews: ‘I really enjoyed doing it and to be perfectly honest with you, all joking aside, I could do it right now. I’m 71 years old. I’m 71 years old and fit. I’m strong. I’ve never stopped training.
He added: ‘I wanted to take part in some shape or form in the new series, or even be a co-host, but when I contacted them, I got no reply.’
‘I think they basically wanted to get away from everything to do with the original show and just do it their own way, which is understandable.’

In its heyday, the programme attracted 13 million viewers, with members of the public battling it out against a cast of bodybuilders and gymnasts, known as Gladiators (Michael pictured)
Despite the snub, the star is enthusiastic about the reboot, adding: ‘I think it’s fantastic. I think it’s going to be a lot harder for them this time around because of Netflix and Prime and there’s a lot of competition. Whereas before we didn’t have all that.’
‘I couldn’t go anywhere. I couldn’t even go to a shopping mall. I’d be mobbed. I never envisioned it was going to be that big. You just don’t realise the power of television.’
He continued: ‘Basically, it was a family show. Grandma could sit down with the children and their children and it was just the whole family show.
‘There weren’t many family shows out at the time and it captured the market.’
Asked whose idea it was for him to play the bad guy, he said: ‘It was my idea but, because when they said to me your name is going to be Wolf – they chose the names, we had no say in that.
‘It was fantastic for me because the character was so strong. They kept me on the show for the whole eight years.’
Gladiators fans were left delighted on Christmas Day when the hotly-anticipated trailer for the reboot finally dropped.
The Gladiators, who consist of Olympians and bodybuilders, were dressed in matching metallic outfits which all bore their unique logo and nickname by which they will be known.
In the first look at the series, the formidable seventeen showcased their bulging muscles as they took on a number of challenges against civilians.

Gladiators fans were left delighted on Christmas Day when the hotly-anticipated trailer for the reboot finally dropped, with hosts Bradley Walsh and his son Barney starring as hosts

The original cast in 1998 (Back row – left to right: Warrior, Raider, Hunter, Saracen, Trojan. Second row – left to right: Falcon, Rhino, Cobra, Nightshade, Wolf, Panther. Front row – left to right: Amazon, Vogue, Lightning, Jet, Zodiac)
The live audience were seen going completely wild as the Gladiators took on intense challenges including wrestling, scaling climbing walls and swinging through the air from suspended rings.
The fearsome group includes trained rugby players, accomplished swimmers, sprinters and powerlifters who battle contenders at Sheffield Arena.
Contestants face the unenviable task of taking on the Gladiators in the ultimate test of speed and strength in a series of brand new games alongside some classics, among them fan-favourite The Eliminator.
Gladiators continues Saturday 10 February at 5.50pm on BBC One and BBC iPlayer.