Celebrity Celebrity Relationships Celebrity Friendships Jon Bon Jovi Opens Up About Friendship with Richie Sambora: 'There Was Never a Fight' Bon Jovi spoke about Sambora's decision to leave his band at a screening of 'Thank You Goodnight: The Bon Jovi Story' By Kirsty Hatcher Kirsty Hatcher Kirsty Hatcher is an Associate Editor on the People.com Morning Team. She has been working at PEOPLE since 2023. Her work previously appeared on ok.co.uk, in OK! Magazine and Reach PLC magazines. People Editorial Guidelines and Liza Esquibias Liza Esquibias Liza Esquibias is an Editorial Intern at PEOPLE. She is a rising senior majoring in Journalism at Pepperdine, where she is the editor-in-chief of the school's magazine. People Editorial Guidelines Published on April 11, 2024 05:40AM EDT Richie Sambora and Jon Bon Jovi. Photo: Kevin Mazur/Getty; Emma McIntyre/Getty Jon Bon Jovi is setting the record straight on his relationship with his former bandmate Richie Sambora. During a Q&A at a screening of the band’s docuseries, Thank You Goodnight: The Bon Jovi Story, in Los Angeles on April 10, Bon Jovi, 62, opened up about the pair’s friendship following Sambora’s departure from Bon Jovi in the middle of their 2013 world tour. Asked whether it was possible he and Sambora, 64, who left the band for personal reasons, could perform on a stage together again, Bon Jovi noted that while his bandmate “didn’t show up” for a series of shows on their tour, there was never a falling out between the duo. “There was never a fight,” said Bon Jovi. “There was substance abuse, there was anxiety, there was being a single parent, there was a lot of personal issues he was going through. But never to this day did any of us, me or him or David [Bryan] or Tico [Torres], ever have a fight.” Richie Sambora, Jon Bon Jovi and Alec John Such. Ke.Mazur/WireImage Livin' on a Prayer — and Big Hair! 16 Totally Epic Photos of Bon Jovi on Tour in the 1980s to Take You Back “He had some issues that he just couldn't wrap his head around and he wanted to be home more than he wanted to be on the road, but you got to show up for work,” he continued. “So there's no animosity. An integral part of my story for three of the four chapters was my right-hand man, asked to join my band and I was lucky to have met him. But life went on.” “When he quit the band, it was going to stop because he quit the band. So I don't hold any animosity. Unfortunately, rock and roll's not a life sentence. And I respect the idea that he wanted to stay home and raise his daughter. It's unfortunate for us and for the world, but I am not mad about it.” Reflecting on his decision to leave, Sambora told PEOPLE in 2021, “It wasn’t a popular decision by any means, obviously, but there was really almost no choice about it. I had a lot of conscious work to do around [my personal life]. I had people around me that loved me, and it was a good thing I got through it … I realized [daughter] Ava needed me to be around at that point in time. Family had to come first, and that’s what happened.” Sambora shares Ava, 26, with his ex-wife Heather Locklear. Last month, a source told PEOPLE that 11 years after leaving the band, his daughter still remains his number one priority. Richie Sambora and his daughter Ava. Mike Coppola/Getty Images For The Rock and Roll Hall of Fame Thank You, Goodnight: The Bon Jovi Story Drops First Full-Length Trailer: Watch "Richie and Ava are very close. It's his girl," the insider said. "She means everything to him and always has." A source also shared how Sambora "was feeling demoralized” three years before he exited the group and "personal issues" contributed to his departure. "There were tensions in the band and Richie had a lot of personal issues," the insider told PEOPLE. "His dad died. Heather divorced him." Speaking to Ultimate Classic Rock in March, Bon Jovi told the outlet that he and Sambora are not in touch. Phil X replaced Sambora in the band after previously filling in for him during several shows in 2011. Richie Sambora and Jon Bon Jovi. Jo Hale/Redferns; Kevin Mazur/Getty Never miss a story — sign up for PEOPLE's free daily newsletter to stay up-to-date on the best of what PEOPLE has to offer, from celebrity news to compelling human interest stories. “We’re not in contact because he’s not in the organization any longer,” the “Livin’ on a Prayer” singer said. “[That] doesn’t mean that there’s not love forever, but it’s 11 years ago that he just didn’t show up anymore. And there were emotional issues that he was dealing with as a single dad, and there were substance abuse issues that, you know … Phil X had to show up one time, and then Phil X had to show up another time. And then, again, there’s a show that night. What are we gonna do?” The rocker also revealed that he and Sambora, a childhood friend who was the band’s lead guitarist for 30 years, did not work together on the band’s Hulu docuseries, which premieres April 26. “Not a word. That was [director] Gotham Chopra. This wasn’t a puff piece and this was no bulls---,” he told the outlet. “This is not us behind the scenes pulling strings. Oh no, no, no. They interviewed Richie in London. I wasn’t there. I had nothing to do with it.” Close