1979 BDO World Darts Championship

The 1979 Embassy World Darts Championship was the second World Professional Championships. Having been held the previous year at the Heart of the Midlands Club in Nottingham, the event moved to Jollees Cabaret Club in Stoke-on-Trent where it was to remain until 1985.[2]

1979 Embassy World Darts Championship
Tournament information
Dates2–9 February 1979
VenueJollees Cabaret Club[1]
LocationStoke-on-Trent
Country England
Organisation(s)BDO
FormatSets
Final – best of 9
Prize fund£15,000
Winner's share£4,500
High checkout161 England Tony Brown
161 England Ronnie Davis
Champion(s)
England John Lowe
«1978 1980»
1979 BDO World Darts Champion - John Lowe

The tournament was held between 2 February and 9 February and had been expanded from 16 players to 24. The eight seeded players each received a bye into the second round. The format also changed from a straight matchplay (legs) to sets. Each set was the best of 5 legs. - For matches in the opening rounds the matches were best of three sets, - best of five for the quarter-finals and semi-finals, with the final being best of 9 sets, split over an afternoon and evening session with the play-off for third held in between.

Defending champion, Leighton Rees of Wales again progressed to the final where he met John Lowe in a repeat of the inaugural championship. This time, Lowe was the top seed and came out on top in the final by 5 sets to 0.[1]

New players

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With the expansion from 16 to 24 players in the finals, 11 players made their championship debuts, the most notable being John Wilson of Scotland, - no doubt to be soon known as Jocky. Wilson's performances over 1978 had enabled him to be seeded 8th for the tournament, and thus ensure a place in round 2 straight away.

Seeds

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Wilson entering the seeds meant he would replace Rab Smith, the Scot having to play the first round before moving into the later stages. England's John Lowe had risen to be number 1 seed, with Eric Bristow dropping to 2nd seed after his first round defeat a year earlier. Leighton Rees remained seeded 3, with Tony Brown moving up to number 4. The Semi-Finalist from 1978 Nicky Virachkul was seeded 5th with the other Last 4-man, Stefan Lord seeded 6th. Alan Evans was the 7th seed along with Wilson as 8th.

  1.   John Lowe
  2.   Eric Bristow
  3.   Leighton Rees
  4.   Tony Brown
  5.   Nicky Virachkul
  6.   Stefan Lord
  7.   Alan Evans
  8.   Jocky Wilson

Prize money

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Total Prize fund was £15,000 (plus a £12,000 bonus for a nine-dart finish - not won)

  • Champion £4,500
  • Runner-up £2,000
  • Third Place £1,500
  • Fourth Place £1,000
  • Quarter finalists £500
  • 2nd round losers £300
  • 1st round losers £200

Results

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First round (best of 3 sets)
2–3 February
Second round (best of 3 sets)
4–6 February
Quarter-finals (best of 5 sets)
6–7 February
Semi-finals (best of 5 sets)
8 February
Final (best of 9 sets)
9 February
1  John Lowe 88.842
  Charlie Ellix 69.221  Doug McCarthy 71.730
1  John Lowe 83.463
  Doug McCarthy 68.632
8  Jocky Wilson 78.081
8  Jocky Wilson 72.172
  Murray Smith 68.710  Jim McQuillan 73.251
1  John Lowe 81.353
  Jim McQuillan 71.582
4  Tony Brown 78.352
5  Nicky Virachkul 86.621
  Andy Green 70.331  Alan Glazier 85.212
  Alan Glazier 86.582
  Alan Glazier 77.432
4  Tony Brown 84.573
4  Tony Brown 81.242
  Barry Atkinson 76.741  Ceri Morgan 71.570
1  John Lowe 86.135
  Ceri Morgan 78.622
3  Leighton Rees 77.610
2  Eric Bristow 81.452
  Cliff Lazarenko 78.470  Terry O'Dea 65.400
2  Eric Bristow 71.331
  Terry O'Dea 79.902
7  Alan Evans 82.273
7  Alan Evans 79.752
  Tony Sontag 82.210  Ronnie Davis 82.340
7  Alan Evans 79.581
  Ronnie Davis 87.402
3  Leighton Rees 76.963
6  Stefan Lord 79.471
  Conrad Daniels 72.021  Rab Smith 73.302
  Rab Smith 74.530
  Rab Smith 74.652
3  Leighton Rees 83.163
3  Leighton Rees 76.902
  Bill Lennard 74.600  Tony Clark 77.781
  Tony Clark 76.322

John Lowe won the final 5-0 (3-1, 3-0, 3-0, 3-2, 3-0) and thus became the 1979 BDO World Darts Champion. Illness prevented Alan Evans from playing the third-place match, so Tony Brown took third place by default.

References

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  1. ^ a b Ralph Hickok (16 January 2010). "History - World Darts Champions". HickokSports.com. Archived from the original on 9 December 2012. Retrieved 3 February 2011.
  2. ^ "The World Championship of Darts". Learnaboutdarts.com. Archived from the original on 18 December 2010. Retrieved 3 February 2011.