LOOKING AFTER THE FUTURE OF THE SPORT OF DARTS
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1973 to 2008: |
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THIRTY-FIVE YEARS OF THE BRITISH DARTS ORGANISATION
The British Darts Organisation is proudly celebrating its 35th
Anniversary Year, having been founded in 1973 by Olly Croft, Sam Hawkins, and
several other like-minded individuals who went on to create and establish the
leading governing body for darts in the world.
Today, the British Darts Organisation is celebrating the proud and rich history
of the organisation it founded 35 years ago, and nowhere is this more clearly
reflected than in its major televised Championships: The Winmau World Masters,
the oldest major tournament in World Darts having been played since 1974, and
the World Professional Darts Championship, created by the BDO in 1978, played
annually ever since, and screened for thirty-one years on BBC TV.
These two Championships embody the true history of the sport of darts, and both
titles are the most coveted and sought after in World Darts.
Nothing means more to a darts player than being crowned Winmau World
Master or Lakeside World Professional Darts Champion.
And fittingly, the 35th year of the BDO heralds yet another new era
for BDO darts with the emergence of two new young and exciting World Champions –
24 year old MARK WEBSTER of Wales and 23 year old Russian sensation ANASTASIA
DOBROMYSLOVA.
In January, Mark became the third Welshman to be crowned World Professional
Darts Champion and the first from North Wales.
The late, great Leighton Rees won the inaugural World Pro in 1978, and
then Richie Burnett returned it to the Welsh Valleys
seventeen years later in 1995.
The modest left-hander from Denbigh is the new ‘Prince Of Welsh Darts’ and not
only represents the sport today, but also the future of darts.
At such a young age he is already World No.1, and as well as his
Lakeside title and many more besides, he’s also reigning WDF Europe
Cup and World Cup Singles Champion
Anastasia is the first ever Russian to be crowned Women’s World Professional
Darts Champion after ending the incredible seven-year unbeaten reign of
England’s Trina Gulliver.
As such, she is the new and exciting face of women’s darts and will undoubtedly
enhance the BDO initiative to attract even more women into the sport of darts.
The BDO has always been supportive of Women’s Darts, and this has single
handedly succeeded in producing the high playing standards and prize money
enjoyed by women darts players today.
Only the BDO and WDF provide opportunities and a true stand-alone World
Championship for women, and that is a proud achievement with which to celebrate
this 35th Anniversary year.
The World Professional Darts Championship was established as the first ever
World Darts Championship in 1978, and together with the World Masters, has been
the catalyst for the worldwide popularity and growth of darts.
Without doubt, it enjoys all the history and kudos of the premier Championship
in World Darts, and as such has been an important part of BBC TV’s calendar of
major world sporting events for over thirty years. Its spiritual home has been
Lakeside Country Club, Frimley Green from 1986 right up to the present day.
Just as Wimbledon is the home of tennis and The Crucible, Sheffield is the home of World Snooker, so Lakeside is now revered worldwide as the true Home of
World Darts.
Indeed, the World Championships from Lakeside
every January are recognised as the ‘shop window’ for the sport of darts
worldwide. BBC TV Sport beam it to millions across the UK, and BBC Worldwide and Eurosport
take it to a potential global audience of ONE HUNDRED MILLION!
In addition, since 1998, Dutch TV station SBS-6 have shown live and recorded
coverage throughout The Netherlands, and its success is the major reason for the
growth of darts in Holland and Europe.
The BDO has always prided itself on innovation, and following its initiative of
inviting women into the World Professional International Play-Offs in 1996, the
first ever stand-alone Women’s World Professional Championship was introduced in
2001 and has been played as an integral part of the World Championships at
Lakeside ever since.
A total of sixteen British World Professional Champions have been produced since
1978, and the BDO has reinforced the global kudos of the World Championship with
overseas World Champions from
Canada
(John Part), Holland
(Raymond Barneveld and Jelle Klaasen), Australia (Tony David) and most
recently from Russia
(Anastasia Dobromyslova).
Just as the BDO consistently provides opportunities for women players, so its
youth policies ensure that the future of the sport is well looked after for the
benefit of all.
The BDO looks after both
women and youth and places a great deal of importance on the introduction and
nurturing of youngsters in the sport of darts.
Every BDO county has a youth section for boys and girls, and major
tournaments like the Winmau World Masters are proud to annually produce Boys and
Girls Masters Champions.
There has been a Boys Masters Champion every year since 1986 – the latest being
Shaun Griffiths of England - and a Girls
Masters Champion every year since 1999 – with the outstanding Welsh youngster
Kimberley Lewis becoming the first ever player to hold the Girls Masters title
for two consecutive years: 2006 and 2007.
The BDO’s annual Young Player Of The Year award also throws a valuable spotlight
on the talented players who represent the future of darts.
The 2006/2007 winners are Ross Smith and Kate Dando
Then there is the annual British Teenage Open, the BDO British Youth Knockout
Cup and, of course, the WDF Europe Cup Youth
and the WDF World Cup. All are a major source of providing opportunities for
young talent to progress at the highest competitive levels.
As a prime example of this, in 2007, thirteen girl Champions and
twenty-one boy Champions qualified from the BDO for the Winmau World Masters. .
The 2007 BDO British Teenage Champion is Matthew Hannaford, the latest Welsh
prodigy from Glamorgan, and the youngsters from Warwickshire won the 2007 BDO
Inter-County Youth KO Cup.
13 year-old Keegan Brown became the youngest England player to represent his
county when he played for the Isle-of-Wight.
Jamie Lewis was only 12 when he became the youngest Welsh player to
represent his county and then went on to represent Wales in the WDF World Cup in Australia!
Double Girls World Master Kimberley Lewis has also represented
Wales
at International level.
Such talent cannot be manufactured. It’s based on natural ability, but that
ability has to be given opportunities, and that is what the BDO system is all
about - recognising talent and ability from an early age and then encouraging
and developing it.
The proof was contained in the 2007 BDO England Open, in which 17 year-old
Andrew Foster of Cumbria won a cracking Youth final
against another promising youngster, Simon Hartley.
Most encouragingly, the number of entries for the England Open Youth event
produced a very healthy 50% increase on the previous year.
Initiatives like the BDO’s 18-25 Young Player Challenge, launched in 2006, have
also been very successful in opening the door to another important age group.
The take has been remarkable, with over 500 entries through the counties.
The ultimate reward is entry to the International Play-Offs for the World
Professional in Bridlington and with it the chance to get to
Lakeside. It is another
prime example of the BDO providing real opportunities for its players.
Creating and maintaining history for the sport of darts has become the role of
the BDO on behalf of its players and officials, and one of its greatest
achievements came on June 3rd,2005
when it achieved recognition for darts as a bona-fide sport with a unanimous
agreement from the sports councils of Great Britain and Northern Ireland.
Because of this, the BDO is recognised as Britain’s
leading darts organisation with over ONE THOUSAND officials and a calendar that
produces in excess of EIGHT HUNDRED darts events annually for all players,
regardless of gender, age or ability.
Another major step forward for worldwide darts came In April 2007, when the
World Darts Federation was accepted as a full member of GAISF (the General
Association of International Sports Federations).
The application by the WDF to
this prestigious body was strongly supported by the BDO.
Chairman Dave Alderman presented a
powerful and professional application in
Beijing, together with Roy Price, now President of the
WDF.
The comprehensive application received an incredible 79% of the votes in favour,
and the WDF is now recognised as the overall governing body for darts throughout
the entire world.
The global membership of the WDF – now with more than sixty national darts
bodies covering every Continent - and constant lobbying by the BDO now puts
darts on the leading edge of Olympic eligibility status. Who could have
predicted such an achievement thirty-five years ago?
The growth of world darts continues with the addition of further countries to
the WDF membership – the latest including Iran, Brunei, Korea, India, Pakistan and Turkey.
The WDF is now the world governing body for darts, and the BDO is firmly
established as governing body for the sport of darts in Britain. As such
it is fully committed to regulating, organising, promoting, staging,
administrating and fostering darts nationally, internationally and worldwide for
men, women, boys and girls to ensure the on-going growth of the sport for all
participants.
The BDO represents darts from grass roots right through to national,
international, world and professional levels.
As such it is all-inclusive and totally representative of the whole sport
of darts.
Over the years, the BDO has formulated the rules by which the sport is now
governed, together with guidelines and policies on disciplinary procedures,
doping, smoking, drinking and dress codes.
Dave Alderman, now Chairman of the BDO, has played an important role in
looking after and implementing BDO legislation, ensuring that rules and
guidelines are not only kept up-to-date, but also adhered to for the good of the
BDO, its players and the sport as a whole. Indeed,
BDO rules and guidelines have been adopted on a global basis for the benefit of
everyone who plays and enjoys competitive darts.
But most important of all, the BDO created the County system and with it
thousands of organised darts events – including the majors - that have combined
to create a world stage for darts and its players from national, international,
world and professional levels.
And with the formation of International Teams for England, Scotland and Wales, the BDO
has always been at the very forefront of International and World Darts.
British National Men’s teams have now won the WDF World Cup fourteen times since
it was first played in 1977, and
the WDF Europe Cup has been won thirteen times since 1978.
British National Women’s teams have
won the WDF World Cup eight times since 1983, and the WDF Europe Cup eleven
times since 1982.
As well as a variety of tournaments involving the national sides, the famous BDO
British International Darts Championships for Men and Women have been played
annually since 1979.
The ongoing programme of open, competitive darts for Men, Women and Youth,
remains at the very heart of the BDO’s heritage, and in this its 35th
Anniversary Year as the premier darts organisation in the world, the BDO is
proud that its success continues to go from strength to strength.
As founder member of the World Darts Federation in 1976, the BDO moved
seamlessly onto the world stage for the benefit of its players, who have now
enjoyed the challenge of the WDF World Cup bi-annually since 1977 and the WDF
Europe Cup bi-annually since 1978.
This means that BDO and WDF players are now enjoying their fourth decade of
national, international, world and professional darts competition – which is a
wonderful note on which to celebrate this anniversary year.
It also means that the regulatory powers of the BDO, together with its rules,
policies and procedures, have been adopted by the WDF and its membership.
So what is the secret of such a wonderful all-encompassing success story for the
sport of darts?
“There is no secret, other than hard work and dedication”, says Olly Croft,
managing director of BDO Enterprises and Secretary General of the WDF. “Way back
in 1973 there was just a handful of people with an idea and an objective to
bring organised darts to as many people as possible.
Today, I am proud to say that we have achieved this, but we don’t sit
back on our laurels as we continue to move forward in order to protect and
promote our sport for all.
“This is the very ethos of the BDO. We are a darts ‘family’ which has
subsequently become part of an even bigger world darts family through the WDF.
That is our strength, and I feel proud when I look back to see how we’ve grown
from a few individuals into a national and world organisation with thousands of
members enjoying darts right around the world.
“Our aims and ambitions have not changed. We still promote darts for all
players, regardless of gender, age or ability. As such, the BDO is run as a real
sport for the people within it – be they players, officials, supporters or their
families.
“BDO and WDF darts is fully inclusive of the ‘family’ ethic. It was founded on
that principal, and I am delighted to say that it remains that way today”.
But away from the major events, and complementing them perfectly, is the British
Inter-Counties system for Men, Women and Youth, which is the envy of the darts
playing world. And of course the
BDO has its own
London
headquarters from where the administration of the sport takes place on a daily
basis.
Thirty five years after being founded, the BDO is now proudly recognised and
respected across the globe and deals with all darts matters, be they local,
national or worldwide.
The BDO website is professionally administered and so comprehensive in content
that it received hundreds of thousands of hits every day of the week.
During the 2008 Lakeside World Professional the daily hits reached almost
one-million!
From a front room in Muswell Hill to sports recognition and the possibility of
Olympic status for darts in the not too distant future, are wonderful
achievements for the BDO to celebrate in its 35th anniversary year!
Then there are the honours: An MBE for Eric Bristow in 1986 and more recently,
the richly earned OBE for BDO founder Olly Croft in 2004.
Both reflect the esteem in which the BDO and its players are held in an
official capacity.
Indeed, after 35 years of transforming darts from a largely pub/club based
activity into a professionally run and administered world sport, the BDO has
been – and still is - at the very forefront of maintaining its mission statement
of providing darts for all.
“Incredibly, despite the many changes in social values, I am delighted to say
that the very loyalties and family values on which the BDO was founded in 1973,
are still as strong today as they were then”, adds Olly Croft. “These family
values permeate the BDO Counties and WDF Countries, and then
carry on right through to our major events nationally, internationally and
worldwide.
“We are rightly proud of our long association with BBC Television, but it was
the BDO who had the vision to promote darts as an exciting and extremely popular
televised sport on terrestrial TV, and later satellite and cable TV.
We were the
front-runners for televised darts on a mass scale, and the TV companies quickly
recognised that the excitement and skill of our sport and its players was a huge
ratings winner.
“The late 70s and 80s produced wall-to-wall televised darts from the BDO. Darts
was on practically every channel every week. In fact, we enjoyed such massive
coverage on both BBC and ITV that I can remember having to literally fight off
the TV companies! They simply
couldn’t get enough of our product or our players, and BDO darts became hugely
popular.
“Over the years, BDO darts have been seen on BBC, ITV, Sky, Eurosport, BBC
Choice, and cable/satellite providers.
Not forgetting, of course, SBS-6 in The Netherlands and
BBC Worldwide, who sell the World
Championship and the World Masters to a potential global TV audience of
one hundred million!
“My love for darts knows no boundaries and I have devoted my entire life and
that of my family, to this wonderful sport and the people within it – players,
officials, supporters and broadcasters alike - my ongoing wish is that we all
continue to work together to ensure that our positive policies continue to
benefit everyone within the BDO.
“What more can I add, other than offering sincere best wishes to all of the
players – Men, Women and Youth - our dedicated officials, administrators,
sponsors, broadcasters and supporters for making it all possible.”
Finally, this magazine was founded shortly after the BDO came into existence,
and it is no surprise that both Darts World and the BDO have continued to grow
and flourish together over the last thirty-five years. The very fact that they
continue to play vitally important roles
in promoting the great sport of darts is the perfect way in which to say ‘Happy
35th Anniversary British Darts Organisation’.
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