Bradley Walsh fuels BBC Strictly host rumours with unexpected backstage  appearance

Chaos erupted behind the glitterball last Saturday night when Bradley Walsh, grinning like a man who knows something the rest of us don’t, strolled casually into the Strictly Come Dancing production corridor as if he’d been hosting the show for the last twenty years.

And according to multiple eyewitnesses who still can’t quite believe what they saw, the 65-year-old national treasure didn’t just “pop in for a hello”. He spent three full hours touring every inch of the set, shaking hands with crew, posing for selfies with the professional dancers, and, most explosively of all, sitting in the host’s chair on the main stage while the lighting director ran a full “key light test” on him.

“He looked scarily comfortable,” one long-serving floor manager whispered. “He was spinning in Tess and Claudia’s swivel chair, doing the countdown voice – ‘In three… two… one… cue music!’ – and the entire gallery was howling. Then he turned to the director and went, ‘How’s my close-up, darling?’ like he’d done it a thousand times.”

The unexpected cameo has sent BBC executives into a flat spin and bookies slashing odds faster than a bad cha-cha-cha.

Within minutes of Walsh leaving the building, Ladbrokes cut the price on him replacing Claudia Winkleman and Tess Daly from 33/1 to just 2/1 favourite. By Sunday morning it was evens. By Monday, some firms had suspended betting altogether.

Sources inside the Strictly bubble say the visit was anything but accidental.

“Bradley was personally invited by the executive producer,” a senior production source spilled. “It wasn’t a ‘come and watch the show from the audience’. It was a full backstage pass, meeting with department heads, wardrobe trying jacket sizes on him, even the glamour team doing a quick powder test because ‘TV lights can be unforgiving at 65’. This wasn’t curiosity. This was an audition disguised as a jolly.”

Bradley Walsh fuels Strictly hosting rumours after being spotted on BBC set  | Devon Live

For months, rumours have swirled that the BBC is quietly planning a major hosting shake-up for 2026 – the show’s 20th anniversary series on its new channel, BBC One, after the move from BBC One. Insiders claim bosses want a “big swinging name” to stop the post-scandal ratings slide and reclaim Saturday night dominance from ITV’s juggernauts (Britain’s Got Talent, The Masked Singer, and, ironically, Walsh’s own The Chase).

And there is simply no bigger, safer, more loved name in British telly right now than Bradley Walsh.

The man already hosts The Chase, Blankety Blank, Gladiators, and the National Television Awards. He has his own prime-time Saturday night entertainment show in development. He sells out arenas with his son Barney. He even had a number-one album. The only major entertainment format he hasn’t conquered? The one with the glitterball.

“Strictly is the final boss level,” a BBC entertainment commissioner admitted off-record. “And Bradley is the only presenter alive who could walk in on week one and the entire country would go, ‘Yeah, that works.’ He’s warm, funny, quick as a flash, and most importantly, he can control a live show when it goes wrong – which Strictly does, every single week.”

The chemistry test, witnesses say, was off the charts.

When Walsh bumped into Shirley Ballas in the corridor, she flung her arms around him screaming, “Please say yes, I’ll behave, I promise!” Craig Revel Horwood apparently deadpanned, “Finally, someone with worse posture than me,” before hugging him. Even Anton Du Beke, long tipped as a future host himself, was overheard telling Walsh, “Mate, if they offer it to you, take it. I’ll just do the jokes from the judges’ desk.”

Perhaps the most telling moment came at 9:45 p.m., when the live show was on air. Walsh was ushered into the gallery and handed a talkback headset. As the celebrities took to the floor, he instinctively started commentating in that familiar, velvet rumble: “Oh, look at that footwork… risky lift… she’s got the hips of a champion!” The gallery crew reportedly turned to each other and mouthed, “We’re done for. He’s perfect.”

Claudia and Tess, far from feeling threatened, are said to be “secretly thrilled” at the prospect of a third presenter joining the lineup rather than replacing them. “They adore Brad,” a friend of the duo revealed. “They’ve been texting him memes all week saying ‘Welcome to the madhouse, big boy.’”

But the biggest clue dropped straight from Walsh’s own mouth. As he finally left the studio just after midnight, surrounded by cheering runners and dancers, he turned to the executive producer, winked, and said loud enough for half the corridor to hear:

“Tell the money men I’ll do it… but I want my own dressing room with a dartboard and a fridge full of Guinness.”

He then hopped into a waiting car, still wearing the Strictly lanyard around his neck.

BBC insiders now say an official approach is “imminent” and that contract talks could begin as early as January. The corporation is allegedly prepared to offer a record-breaking £2 million per series to lure him – more than double what the current hosts earn combined.

For a nation that has watched him chase contestants, blank out celebrities, and now potentially waltz into the biggest entertainment job on television, only one question remains:

Is Britain ready for Prime Minister of Saturday Night Television, President Bradley Walsh?

Because after Saturday’s not-so-secret visit, it doesn’t look like we’re getting a choice.

The glitterball has chosen its next king.

And his name is already on the leaderboard in lights.