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Dave Whitcombe

Dave Whitcombe With Patrick Chaplin
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Winner of
the News of the World in 1988/89, twice Embassy Finalist, twice World Master
and with a string of other championship wins to his name, Dave Whitcombe
slid quietly out of the darting public’s eye in the early 1990s. In this
article, Darts Historian, Patrick Chaplin, tracks Dave down to his pub in
Kent and learns that not only is Dave still playing but he’s also on the
comeback trail.
(left)
Dave Whitcombe, with Darts Historian Patrick
Chaplin at Dave’s pub, The Gore Court Arms in Sittingbourne, in July 2004
(Photo: Chippix) |
Dave Whitcombe ‘on the oche’
looking forward to a return to Big Time darts
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Dave
Whitcombe deserves a place in the darts Hall of Fame. When he won the
WINMAU World Masters in 1982 he had truly arrived. Starting as a 14-1
outsider he took out Eric Bristow and the two Australian dartsmasters, Kevin
White and Terry O’Dea on his way to the Final where he met Scotland’s Jocky
Wilson and beat him 2-1.
Three years
later, in 1985, Dave was back and on this occasion his journey to the Final
laid waste to the hopes of Bob Anderson, Mike Gregory, Dave Lee and Stephen
Coveney. He met Northern Ireland’s Ray Farrell in the Final and beat him
3-0. Darts World described Dave’s performance as ‘a powerful demonstration
of top class darts.’
Dave was
born in Chatham, Kent on 27th June 1954 only son of Tony and Sheila
Whitcombe. Dave’s parents used to enjoy darts and had a coiled paper
dartboard at home that they played on occasionally with friends. Dave
recalls that, at the age of about 11 or 12, he used to join in and generally
‘muck about’. It was at this early stage that he found hitting the 19 not
that difficult. |
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After his
schooling had finished Dave, aged 15, went to work at Chatham dockyard where he
says ‘I bummed around making out I was an electrician.’ His formal title was
‘Apprentice Electrician’. As part of his hectic daily schedule Dave used to go
to the pub every lunchtime and play darts. He recalls, “Graham Stone was a good
local player and he always wanted to play me for a half pint because he saw me
as a mug, an easy touch.” Dave was always up for the challenge but never won.
After about a year of being beaten and forever paying for Graham’s beer, Dave
made a life-changing decision. “I got that hacked off of losing, I went along to
a local sports shop and got my own darts and started practising.” Dave
practised and practised and became a better and better player. However, Dave
admits that Stone left the area “before I could nail him.”
By the age of
18 Dave was playing for the Old Lord Raglan, Chatham, playing on the Kent
Doubles board. When he was 20 years old he was picked to play for Kent. At that
time the best Kent county dart players were George Simmons, Tony Brown and Lew
Walker. However, the two local players that Dave admired most were Ben Martin
and Chic Love, two local players from the Chatham/Medway area. Dave says they
were both ‘mustard’ on the Kent doubles board and regularly finished games with
100+ out-shots.
Dave ‘retired’
from the dockyard in 1975.
The reason was
clear. Earlier that year, a friend, Graham Parker, had invited Dave up to the
Windmill in Cricklewood for a darts competition, which Dave won. The following
Sunday he played in another competition and won again. Dave told me, “I found
that I could earn up to two weeks wages on a weekend. I asked myself “What the
hell am I going to work for?” I was always skipping off work and mum went ape
when I told her and then things came to a head. Dad had no problem with it but
told me, “You must give mother housekeeping. If you fail to do that – give up
the darts.”” Dave agreed.
The move from
playing on the regional Kent Board to the standard trebles board did not faze
Dave at all and soon, that same year, he won his first ‘major’, the inaugural
Surrey Open. Dave was on a roll and won the Surrey Open again 1977 (there was no
competition in 1976) and 1978, then the Suffolk Open in 1978. He was also
runner-up in the Nodor British Open of 1975, reached the last four of the
British Open in London in 1979 and in 1980 at last pinned his name to a national
trophy when he and Tony Sontag won the British Open pairs.
In The
Guinness Book of Darts (1981) Derek Brown recorded that at that time Dave had
been ‘man-of-the-match’ fives times consecutively for Kent and that that level
of form had established him in the England team, ‘where he quickly hit a winning
streak.’ Derek added, ‘He has a contented look, but always fights hard to win as
he did in the Marlboro Masters of 1980.’ Perhaps it was this style and
persistence that was admired by the up-and-coming Phil Taylor who last year
cited Dave as one of his idols. In his autobiography ‘The Power’ Phil wrote, ‘My
favourite was Dave Whitcombe: good-natured, lovely thrower, equable
temperament.’
In 1980 Dave
went professional.
Dave’s career
went from strength to strength. His personal ambitions were to play for England
and to win the News of the World and he achieved both. Of his News of the World
win in 1988/89 at the Hammersmith Odeon, Dave reckons he had the hardest draw
ever. It was tough. Dave, qualifying as the Eastern Counties Divisional winner
had already beaten Keith Deller and then in the Grand Finals beat Denis Ovens
(London & Home Counties Divisional winner) 2-0, Jocky Wilson (North of England)
2-1 and Arnie Bunn (Midlands) 2-0 and then Dennis Priestley (Yorkshire) 2-1 in
the Final.
Dave recalls,
“I lost the toss in the decider and Dennis hit 140.” Dennis was looking at a 64
out-shot with his sixteenth dart with Dave waiting on 40 after already missing a
finish on 56. Dennis missed the 64 and then Dave finished on double 5 with the
last of his three darts. Dave’s prize was £8,000 and a two-week Caribbean
holiday, whilst Dennis had to content himself with £1,750 plus a gallon of
Morgan’s Rum.
Dave, who
played out of his own pub, the King’s Head, Ipswich also received two sets of
silver News of the World darts; one set for winning the Divisional Final and the
other for winning the Grand Final. Dave told me, “Usually the winner gets to
keep the dartboard too”, but in Dave’s case it was not to be. Dave said “Some
******* had stolen it before I could collect it and take it home.” Dave
believes that his success in the News of the World is unique. He believes that
he is the only pub landlord to win that Championship.
By the time of
the ‘split’ in 1993, and despite continuing success and approaches from the
World Darts Council (WDC) for him to join, Dave was becoming disillusioned with
the sport of darts. He told me “I gave up due to an accumulation of things. One
was when John Lowe, Cliff Lazerenko, Tony Brown and I started the World
Professional Dart Players’ Association which was formed to help the BDO and
establish more tournaments.” The formation of this Association led to a number
of difficulties for Dave – and other professionals. In Dave’s case it took a few
altercations with officialdom for him to make up his mind to quit the sport.
But Dave has
never quit darts absolutely and what of these rumours that he’s making a
comeback and wants to be part of the ‘Big Time’ again? Dave told me, “I’ve
always played for a local team and then three years ago I started playing
serious again.” Dave rejoined the Professional Dart Players Association last
year. Back on the pro circuit, all was looking good for his return. Then a
major complication occurred. Dave said, “One day as I was playing darts, I had a
pain in my elbow which got worse. I played in the Eastbourne Open and was in
terrible pain.” The doctor diagnosed tennis elbow – Or should that strictly be
‘darters elbow’? - and Dave enquired of the medic how long the treatment would
take. The doctor told him “About a year.”
With the
tennis elbow sorted, Dave played again until he suddenly noticed that one of his
fingers was actually out of shape. A further medical examination revealed that
there was a large cell tumour on his right index finger. This was operated on at
East Grinstead Hospital in May 2004 and Dave told me, “I’m now playing again but
the numbness is expected to stay for six months to a year.” Once this is sorted
Dave is planning to go to more tournaments but at present, as Dave says, he is
“just playing at it.”
Today Dave
lives with his wife Delphine at the Gore Court Arms, Sittingbourne, Kent; the
pub which they own. Delphine and Dave run the pub as a real partnership and
Delphine is very much behind the resurgence of Dave Whitcombe the professional
dart player and supports him all the way.
As for any
remaining ambitions, Dave has an idea to create a room filled with examples of
the darts used by all the past and present big names in the game and called
simply ‘Darts of Heroes’. In addition, Dave would like to write another book.
Dave’s first book ‘How to Play Darts’ was published in 1981 and he always
promised himself that another would follow. He told me, “That first book took me
about a fortnight to write – three weeks tops – and it was OK.” His new book
will be different, a “comedy book with a darts theme with real characters and
one which would also tell the truth.”
Dave, we look
forward to the book and more especially to your return to the top flight.
©2004 Patrick
Chaplin
This article first appeared in
Darts Player 2005 published in November 2004

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