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News of the World


THE NEWS OF
THE WORLD INDIVIDUAL DARTS CHAMPIONSHIP
For many
years the News of the World Individual Darts Championship was the one
competition that every dart player wanted to win.
They say
that ‘from little acorns mighty oaks do grow’ and that was never more true than
for the News of the World. However, whereas an acorn can grow into an oak more
or less on its own once it has taken root, the News of the World needed
nurturing.
This was
achieved via the Herculian efforts of the staff on the newspaper and the
hundreds of unpaid organisers and helpers who co-ordinated the contest, dealt
with the incredible logistics and basically held the thing together.
From its
small beginnings in the 1927/28 season with a mere 1,000 or so entries drawn
from the Metropolitan Area of London, enthusiasm for the game grew incredibly
throughout the 1930s. The London competition was enlarged and additional
regions were added until, by the 1938/39 season, there were six, namely London
and the South of England, Wales, Lancashire and Cheshire, Yorkshire, the North
of England and the Midland Counties. But there would be no overall national
champion, although this issue would be addressed after 1945. In 1939 enormous
interest was created by the London and South of England championship, so much so
that a record crowd of 14,534 spectators filled the Royal Agricultural Hall,
London in May to witness the final between Jim Pike (representing the Windmill
Club, Southwark) and Marmaduke Brecon (Jolly Sailor, Hanworth, Middlesex).
Against the odds, Brecon ran out the winner by two games to one.
When war
broke out in September 1939 both the News of the World individual
championship and the recently established team championship organised by The
People newspaper were suspended. However, the News of the World
maintained its high profile of darts during the war years by setting up and
publicising the exploits of the News of the World Team of Dart
Champions. The team played throughout the war – and for some time afterwards –
raising money for charities, particularly the Red Cross. The Team comprised Jim
Pike (Captain), John Ross, Harry Head and Leo Newstead although other darters
would act as substitutes on the occasions when the ‘regulars’ were unable to
appear.
Throughout
most of the war years, darts provided through the NAAFI sports packs or
‘manufactured’ by the servicemen themselves were played in army camps, on board
ship and in prisoner of war camps, all to the News of the World rules.
After the war the Allies, servicemen and women from New Zealand, Australia and
the USA, took the game back home thus sowing the darts seed worldwide - all
playing to News of the World rules. Ex-patriots, settling in Europe and
elsewhere assisted the process.
The News
of the World reappeared after the war in the 1947/48 season and 289,866
entrants. Despite the growth of other competitions from 1945 onwards it
continued to be the News of the World all dart-players wanted to win.
The 1950s was a relatively quiet period for darts but the News of the World
continued unaffected. It was during this time that Unicorn Products Ltd.,
began to produce replica darts as thrown by each News of the World
champion.
Tom Barrett
once wrote that the News of the World was ‘the highlight of each darts
season’ – and no one knew that better than Tom. He had been entering the
News of the World competition for years and had reached the area finals on
three occasions during the 1950s. In 1961 and 1963 he made the London finals and
in 1962 he had reached the Grand Finals. In 1964-65, representing the Odco
Social Club, Tom made the Grand Finals again, this time winning the
championship, beating Ray Hatton of the Flower of the Valley, Rochford 2-0. He
then promptly returned the next year and won it again, this time defeating
Norman Fielding of the Station Inn, Swannington, Leicestershire by two games to
one. Tom’s attempt at a hat-trick the following year ended five matches short
when Bill Harding, a former Welsh Champion, beat him 2-0 in the London and Home
Counties Divisional Final at Battersea Town Hall.
It would be
nearly another decade later before Tom Barrett’s feat was repeated Eric Bristow
(1983 and 1984) and later still by Mike Gregory (1987 and 1988). Five other
darters have in fact won the championship twice but not in consecutive years.
These are Tommy Gibbons (1952 and 1958), Tom Reddington (1955 and 1960), Stefan
Lord (1978 and 1980) and Bobby George (1979 and 1986).
After Barry
Twomlow had won the News of the World in 1969, has was almost immediately
joined Unicorn Products Ltd., and became a darts representative for the company
and has been latterly described as a ‘darts ambassador. I am not alone when I
say that Barry Twomlow has played a key role in the development of the
popularity of the game since the late 1960s. John Ross was of the opinion that
Barry was ‘one of the greatest dart players that have ever lived’ and had
nothing but praise for his work for darts in all corners of our planet.
The 1970s
saw the beginning of the darts ‘boom’ and the establishment of the famous names
in the game of darts, the first darts ‘stars’, of sponsorship and prize money.
But by the end of the 1980s the TV darts bubble had burst. The television
companies abandoned darts because the viewing figures were falling. The
sponsors withdrew their support but the News of the World carried on
regardless. In fact it simply took the News of the World a little longer
to cool to darts and in 1990 the competition ceased. It was ironic that that
was the first year in which the newspaper had run separate competitions for both
men and women players. No reason was given and, sadly, there was no hue and cry
from darters.
Pressure
from dart-players might well have saved the day but the truth was that very few
letters of objection or complaint were received by the newspaper and the News
of the World was allowed to slip quietly away.
There was a
temporary blip in 1996/97 when the competition was surprisingly resurrected.
However, the response was disappointing and thus the News of the World
decided not to run it again. The competition was closed down, this time, it
seems, for good. Thus champions Phil Taylor and Linda Jones have now gone down
in history as the last winners of the News of the World competition.
Despite
this, the place of the News of the World in the history of darts is assured. It
stands up there as the individual darts tournament, the championship of
the people, the one major darts contest that the ‘ordinary man’ – or woman -
could win. There were no restrictions in terms of which association or club you
belonged to. You entered via your own pub, played all matches within a short
travelling distance of your local and could eventually find yourself on the
stage in London fighting for glory, for your pub or club, in front of an
audience of thousands of darts enthusiasts.
I
personally prefer to think of the News of the World Individual Darts
Championship as ‘suspended’ rather than resting. But will we ever see the like
of it again?
©2007
Patrick Chaplin
Ireland had their own News of the World
Champions - Click on link to the left

Author’s Note:
There must be thousands of darters out there who remember the News of the World
and regret its passing. All that are left now are the memories, memories that I
would like to hear about. Why not drop me a line (see the ‘Links’ page) and tell
me of your memories of the News of the World Individual Darts
Championship? Perhaps you know or even are a previous area or divisional
winner or even a past champion? I’d love to hear from you and record your
experiences for posterity. In addition, if you have any newspaper cuttings of
your success, I’d like to ask you for copies so that I can place them in my
darts archive.
This article is
dedicated to all those volunteers who helped the competition thrive over six
decades.
Further reading: For
those who would like to know more about the history of the News of the World
Individual Darts Championship I recommend the News of the World Darts Annual
1988/89, edited by John Morris and published by Invincible Press of London in
1988. Derek Brown’s Guinness Books of Darts (Guinness Superlatives Ltd (1981)
is also worth consulting as is Chapter 5 of Tom Barrett’s book Darts (Pan Books,
1973). Although all are long out of print they should be obtainable on loan [in
the UK] through your local library.
What better way
to remember the competition than including here a roll call of all the winners
and runners up. Champions all! Click here to review.
© Patrick Chaplin 2007

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