Gabriel Clarke’s story has a peculiar symmetry to it. A man who spent thirty years filming other people’s hardships—boxers taking punishment in the last rounds, football players bearing the burden of expectations on aging knees—is now at the center of something he cannot control or alter. In 2021, Clarke was diagnosed with motor neurone disease, a condition that strips the body of its ability to move, speak, and eventually breathe, while leaving the mind entirely intact. It’s a specific kind of cruelty, and the consequences are not difficult to envision for someone whose entire career was based on communication.
Clarke earned his reputation gradually. Starting in local newspapers in Somerset and Bristol, he worked his way through radio — Radio Trent in the East Midlands — before landing at ITV Sport in 1991. He covered World Cups, European Championships, rugby, boxing, and the quiet drama of lower-league football. He won Royal Television Society awards not once but three times for sports news reporting, in 2001, 2002, and 2005. This level of consistency is not something that just happens. It suggests someone who cared about getting it right rather than just getting it done.

His documentary work, particularly in the later part of his career, became something of a calling card. Bobby Robson: More Than a Manager landed in 2018 with genuine warmth and rigour. Finding Jack Charlton, released in 2020 just after Charlton’s death from dementia, was praised for its emotional honesty. Arsene Wenger: Invincible followed in 2021. There’s a thread running through all of them — men in public life grappling with legacy, with decline, with how they’ll be remembered. In hindsight, it’s difficult to ignore the fact that Clarke appeared interested in those themes long before he received his own diagnosis.
The Irish Independent revealed in September 2022 that Clarke, who was then 73 according to the Irish report (although his Wikipedia birth year would place him younger, a discrepancy that is still unresolved), had been seeing IMNDA nurse Eithne Cawley regularly since his MND diagnosis the year before. Clarke and his wife Veronica were pictured in the piece’s accompanying photo, looking outward with a poise that doesn’t quite hide what’s underneath. The fact that Cawley herself has 91 patients spread across eight counties on her caseload speaks volumes about the scope of the issue and the inadequacy of the support system.
The disease of motor neurons is incurable. That is the harsh truth. Although treatments can control symptoms and slow the disease’s progression, the illness’s trajectory is typically one-way. Pace and circumstances vary; some people live for years after receiving a diagnosis, while others decline more quickly than anyone anticipates. Perhaps unintentionally, Clarke’s public profile has raised awareness of how inadequately funded MND care is in both the UK and Ireland.
When you consider Clarke’s career and its aftermath, you’ll notice that he spent years questioning people, including men who had led prominent public lives, such as Alex Ferguson and Arsene Wenger. By most accounts, he wasn’t a soft interviewer. His own story has now evolved into the kind of narrative he may have once pursued. How much Clarke has discussed his illness in public is still unknown, as is the nature of any potential future advocacy. However, the fact that a journalist of his caliber is afflicted with MND gives the illness—which all too frequently goes unnoticed until it’s already present—a unique level of visibility.
FAQs
Q1: What illness has Gabriel Clarke been diagnosed with?
Clarke was diagnosed with motor neurone disease (MND) in 2021.
Q2: Who has been providing care support to Gabriel Clarke?
IMNDA nurse Eithne Cawley has visited him regularly since his diagnosis.
Q3: Is there a cure for motor neurone disease?
No cure exists; treatments only slow progression and manage symptoms.
Q4: What is Gabriel Clarke best known for professionally?
He’s an award-winning ITV journalist and documentary filmmaker of three decades.
Q5: How has Clarke’s diagnosis raised awareness of MND?
His public profile has highlighted MND’s severely underfunded care infrastructure.

