DART TRIVIA
- Dartboards are made from compressed biscuits of African
sisal.
- In 1896, Brian Gamlin, a British
carpenter, arranged the numbers on the dartboard as we
see them still today.
- Flights made of real turkey feathers are becoming harder
to get because of unsatisfactory feathers due to an
increasing demand for smaller turkeys.
- The best wooden one-piece darts were manufactured by
peasants in the Jura Mountains of Southern France.
- The first man to sell matched sets of brass darts was a
Hungarian salesman of boiler linings named Frank
Lowy. He went on to found Unicorn darts, still
the largest darts manufacturers in the world.
- Dart players in Philadelphia, Pa. (the home of American
style darts) used to keep their dart points sticky by
sticking them in potatoes.
- The strangest material ever suggested for making darts is
spend uranium.
- Some dart players in England think throwing darts can get
boring, so they take some six inch nails and use them
instead. Joe Hitchcock used to love to
beat "the champs" in this fashion. One of his
favorite tricks was to "nail" a button from
between someone's outstretched fingers.
- The late Jim Pike, a darts legend in
England before most of you even threw one, was such a
marksman that he could shoot a cigarette from someone's
mouth with a dart - AND STICK IT IN ANY DOUBLE.
- The average speed of a dart hitting a board is around
64kph (40mph).
- London, 1937. The late and great Jim Pike went around the
board on doubles, retrieving his own darts, in the time
of 3 minutes 30 seconds. He did this shooting from the
old distance of 9 feet.
- Can you score more than 180 with 3 darts? - Turn 16 to
the top of the board and it becomes 91. Three triples
give you 819.
- There are more pubs with dartboards in the center of New
York than there are in the center of London.
- Years ago dartboards were made from elm wood. The numbers
and wedges had to be carefully painted on and the spider
(wires) had as many as 100 staples holding it to the
board. To keep it from cracking, the careful pub owner
would soak it in a bucket of water or spillage from the
beer taps over night. This activity spawned the popular
misconception that soaking a loose dartboard in water
will prevent darts from falling out. While this is true
it will also considerably shorten the life of the board.
The boards we use are made of tightly packed fibers of
hemp or sisal. When these are moistened, they swell and
will invariably bulge, causing the fibers to fall out.
The best way is to let natural moisture in the air
tighten the board for you. This, however, can take some
time. If you've got a really bad board, steam it gently
or hang a moistened rag over it to let it
"breathe" the moisture slowly.
- At an exhibition match at the Gipsy Stadium, in England,
in July 1977, Muhammed Ali faced former
Welsh champ Alan Evans. With Evans
scoring only on triples, Ali won hitting a bullseye on
the way out and immediately proclaimed himself darts
champion of the world.
- On February 21st., 1989, at Buckingham Palace, London, Eric
Bristow became the first dart player to receive
the coveted Member of the British Empire award (M.B.E.).
Mr. Bristow admitted he was nervous meeting the queen,
saying, "It was more nerve-racking than any TV
final." This gives him the right to have the letters
M.B.E. present after his name.
- Eric Bristow got his nickname "The
Crafty Cockney" not from his accent, as some may
think, but from a T-shirt he picked up in a California
darts pub.
- We've all heard of people playing darts for money or a
beer, but this tale's got a different twist. It's a known
fact that singers Tom Jones and Englebert
Humperdinck are old friends and like to play
darts. When on tour they've been known to appear at
various pubs all over the world looking for a game.
During the 1970s, they purchased a 3,000-acre ranch and
settled for the fishing rights by playing a game of
darts. Just for the record, Tom Jones won.
- Scotland's former No. 1 dart player, Jocky Wilson,
tossed a 24-dart 1001 leg against American Bud
Trumbower in March of 1987 at the Eastgate U.S.
Marine Base in England. His scores were:
180-140-140-140-81-100-120(out). Jocky scored a fantastic
600 points in his first 12 darts and doubled out with
T20-20-D20 to average 41.7 per dart, start to finish.
- On November 11, 1975 at the Broomfield WMC in Devon,
England, international star Cliff Inglis
tossed a magnificent 19-dart 1001 game, smashing all
previous records to date: 160-180-140-180-121-180-40.
Cliff averaged an unbelievable 52.68 points per dart
despite getting lucky with his first dart, hitting a
double 20 instead of the triple.
- All-County Welshman Leighton Rees, on
December 18, 1976, finished a game of 3000 in 141 darts,
counting on only the single and double bulls and closing
with a double bull. Leighton converted 34 double bulls
and 52 bulls while just 55 darts went astray during this
epic leg.
- Tony Elleson, at the Now Inn Crumlin in
Gwent, England, scored a perfect double start/double
finish 301 game in June of 1987. While not so unusual in
his feat perhaps, but after his first throw he broke a
shaft retrieving his darts and literally had to sit down
for five minutes and dig out the remains before finishing
his game. Certainly the stoppage of play did not affect
his concentration: D20-60-60-60-57-D12.
- On June 19, 1987 at the Fishing Boat Inn in
Northumberland, shooter Tab Hunter (no,
not the movie star!) recorded a brilliant 23 dart 1001
leg: 100-180-140-125-140-100-140-76. He averaged a fine
43.5 points per dart, ending the final 76 in two.
- In May of 1987, Duncan Swift, playing
out of the Felixstowe Dock Sports and Social Club,
Surrey, scored 493,470 points to capture the 24 hour solo
record in May of 1987. While shooting and retrieving the
darts himself, Duncan hit an incredible 123 180s, 643
140s and used a total of 18,369 darts for a fabulous
26.86 points per dart average.
- In April of 1988, Stephen Wagg set the
12 hour solo record for scoring double and single bulls
at the Thorncliff Cricket and Social Club in Sheffield,
England. Stephen registered 961 double bulls and 3,335
single bulls for a score of 131,425. He tossed a grand
total of 9,714 darts for a 13.52 per dart average.
- An eight-hour record for scoring bulls and double bulls
was set by Birmingham players George Perry
and Tony Hodgkiss at The Seventh Trap
Public House in December of 1987. The two, averaging
16.19 per dart, hit 1,406 double bulls and 4,247 single
bulls for a total of 176,475 points, breaking the old
record of 1,048 double bulls and 3,308 single bulls.
- In June of 1978, All-World John Lowe
captured a 1001 leg in 22 darts:
140-180-140-100-140-140-125-D18. John averaged 137 per
throw or a grand 45.6 per dart enroute to this memorable
game.
- Pat Irwin of the Mitre hotel, playing in
a double start/double finish 501 match, hit a 170 in
(DB-60-60) and a 170 out (60-60-DB) in the same leg, in
April of 1987.
- In a special pairs 3001 challenge match against Steve
Brown and Gene Raymond, London
county leaguers Reg Harding and Dave
Lee slugged an 86 darter, just 11 darts short of
the world record: 41- 35- 140- 125- 85- 85- 140- 180-
180- 80- 100- 100- 100- 100- 180- 55- 100- 100- 140- 140-
100- 100- 100- 100- 45- 82- 96- 32. The pair hit 3
maximums enroute to a 34.8 per dart average over the
course of the challenge.
- Probably the most notable individual effort occurred on
October 13, 1984 in the quarter-finals of the MFI World
Matchplay Championships. The match featured British stars
John Lowe and Keith Deller
with Lowe hitting the first televised nine-dart perfect
501 game in the history of the sport. For the record he
went: 180-180-141 (T17, T18, D18) and collected
(eventually) a cheque for 102,000 pounds for his efforts.
(Ironically, due to complex tax laws, Lowe could not
pocket a penny from the jackpot until two years later, as
the currency sat in a British bank waiting for final
approval.)
- In September, 1989 Vic Cutts and Pete
Hotchkins playing at the Eagle Nechells,
Birmingham, England, totaled 460,740 points setting a
24-hour two-man record. The truly amazing fact of their
feat is that they accomplished it on the more difficult
Champion's Choice dartboard.
- During an exhibition at the Bell, Cox Heath, in
Maidstone, Kent, England in July of 1989, Alan
Glazier, one of the most colourful of
professionals, put on a brilliant display of darts. He
won all 13 matches highlighting the occasion with a
magnificent 21-dart 1001 leg - missing the world record
by three darts. His scores were:
140-135-124-140-180-120-161. The 161 out is achieved by
hitting a T20, T17 and D-Bull. That's a per-dart-average
of 47.67 - start to finish. Earlier that year he hit a
22-dart 1001 leg at an exhibition at St. Joseph's Club,
in Chorley, Lancashire. The "Ton Machine"
averaged 45.5 per dart scoring an
81-140-180-100-140-140-180-40.
- While qualifying for the Winmau World Masters in
November, 1989, Norfolk County player Martin
Golder, tossed a very notable 39.12 per dart
average in four legs. He threw two 14-darters, a
12-darter and capped it off with an 11 dart game where he
tossed a 41-180-180-100.
- In November of 1989, Tony Jones recorded
28 perfect 180 scores in just one hour and 25 minutes for
a charity event in Manchester, England.
- During a 24-hour period in August 26-27, 1988, Paul
Finch, Graham Prior and Nick Steggell scored
2,093 double bulls and 7,861 single bulls at the Eight
Bells in Ewell, Surrey, England.
- Six gents from the White Lion Hotel in Penzance, Cornwall
(UK) went around the board 137 times on triples in 12
hours on January 19, 1986.
- In 1986, Allen Chaperlin and Ian
Melton played 1,265 full games of 501 in 182
hours and one minute at the Eagle Tavern, Oxford,
England. That's one game every 8.6 minutes and the feat
took over 7-1/2 days to complete. Ya gotta love it.
- On March 28-29, 1986, Graham Innis, Graham
Miller, Graham Parker, and Richie Davis scored
1,003,769 points in 24 hours at the Maxilla Club in
London, England. During that period they hit 152 perfect
180s.
- Englishman, Richard Smith, a Carlisle
local player, completed a 25-dart 1001 leg in mid 1989.
He scored 140-100-100-95-180-140-100-122-24.
- An impressive 7-man superstar lineup consisting of Bob
Anderson, Eric Bristow, John Lowe, Chris Johns, Martin
Phillips, Alan Warriner, and Ritchie Gardner
established a 15-minute fast-scoring mark of 8,806 points
in a charity throw at the 1988 British Professional
Championships.
- On this side of the Atlantic but across the continent, Craig
Ishigo of Gardinia, Calif. tossed a perfect
cricket leg without even realizing it. In his first shot
he threw a T20, T19 and T18, followed by a T17, T16 and
T15. He capped it off with a bull and doublebull.
Afterwards, when his feat had been pointed out to him, he
said he thought the game had gone unusually fast but
hadn't really thought about it.
- Big Cliff Lazarenko fired his first
9-dart perfect 501 game at an exhibition at the Aberlynon
Leisure Centre. Using 25-gram titanium tungsten darts, he
threw two 180s and a T20, T19, D12 for the 141 out in the
last match of the night.
- Paul Lim of San Bernadino, Calif. threw
a perfect 9-dart 501 leg at the 1990 Embassy World
Championships. Because he did it before the TV cameras he
received L52,000 ($88,000 US) for his remarkable
achievement.
- In the most perfect of perfect 501 games, Roy
Blowies, playing at the Widgeon's Pub in Calgary
in late 1989 achieved his 9-darter by doubling in on the
bullseye first. He scored 161(DB-T20-T17), 180,
160(T20-T20-D20).
- In tournament play: The maximum allowable weight and
length for a dart is 12 inches and 50 grams.
- In the British Dart Organization (BDO), Indian Sikhs are
exempt from the rule forbidding headgear.
- In some very friendly games, a player is allowed to
"double out" by throwing a dart into the space
between the two wires comprising the numeral
"11". Also known as "Splitting the
eleven's" this is used to double out on a score of
1.
The above borrowed and modified from CyberDarts