2010 BDO World Darts Championship

The 2010 Lakeside World Professional Darts Championship was the 33rd World Championship organised by the British Darts Organisation, and the 25th staging at the Lakeside Country Club at Frimley Green. Ted Hankey was the defending men's champion having won the title for the second time in the previous year's final against Tony O'Shea. The defending women's champion was Francis Hoenselaar, having beaten seven-time champion Trina Gulliver in the 2009 final.

Lakeside World Darts Championship
Tournament information
Dates2–10 January 2010
VenueLakeside Country Club
LocationFrimley Green, Surrey
CountryEngland, United Kingdom
Organisation(s)BDO
FormatSets
Finals:
best of 13 (men's)
best of 3 (women's)
Prize fund£325,000
Winner's share£100,000 (men's)
£6,000 (women's)
High checkout170 England Martin Adams
Champion(s)
England Martin Adams
England Trina Gulliver
«2009 2011»

Players from 32 countries around the globe competed to reach the BBC televised finals, which ran from 2–10 January at Frimley Green. The men's top seed was O'Shea. Julie Gore was top women's seed, ahead of Gulliver. There were 11 debutants at the world championships. Also for the first time two brothers, Tony and Steve West, were playing in the same world championship.

The tournament is also remembered for the first round match between Martin Adams and Anthony Fleet, which featured what has been called "the worst leg of darts ever".[1] The opening leg included visits of 26, 41, 5, 41, 22 and 11 by a visibly nervous Fleet. Adams himself had visits of 47, 44 and 32, but eventually won the 54-dart leg and went on to win the match 3–0. Fleet's match average of 65.34 was the lowest of the championship and described as "pub standard".[2][3][4]

Martin Adams won his second World Championship title, beating Dave Chisnall 7–5 in the final. Trina Gulliver won the Women's Championship for the eighth time beating Rhian Edwards 2–0.

Format and qualifiers

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Men's

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The televised stages featured 32 players. The top 16 players in the WDF/BDO rankings over the 2008/09 season were seeded for the tournament.[5] An unusually high total of 11 of the seeded players were knocked out in the first round.

The 32 players who qualified for invitation into the first round proper of the men's singles were:

Top 16
  1.   Tony O'Shea
  2.   Scott Waites
  3.   Martin Adams
  4.   Darryl Fitton
  5.   Ted Hankey
  6.   Ross Montgomery
  7.   Dave Prins
  8.   Alan Norris
  9.   Joey ten Berge
  10.   Martin Atkins
  11.   Steve West
  12.   John Walton
  13.   Mark Barilli
  14.   Scott Mitchell
  15.   John Henderson
  16.   Ian White
Other qualifiers
  1.   Willy van de Wiel
  2.   Stephen Bunting
  3.   Brian Woods
  4.   Mareno Michels
  5.   Robert Wagner
  6.   Daryl Gurney
  7.   Gary Robson
  8.   Martin Phillips
  9.   Paul Hanvidge
  10.   Dave Chisnall
  11.   Garry Thompson
  12.   Martin McCloskey
  13.   Robbie Green
  14.   Tony West
  15.   Paul Carter
  16.   Tony Fleet

Women's

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The televised stages featured 8 players. The top 4 players in the WDF/BDO rankings over the 2008/09 season were seeded for the tournament.[6]

The eight women qualified for invitation were:

Top 4
  1.   Julie Gore
  2.   Trina Gulliver
  3.   Irina Armstrong
  4.   Karen Lawman
Other qualifiers
  1.   Francis Hoenselaar
  2.   Linda Ithurralde
  3.   Deta Hedman
  4.   Rhian Edwards

Prize money

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The 2010 World Championship had a prize fund of £325,000 – a rise of £5,000 on the previous year.[7]

Men's Champion: £100,000 (up from £95,000)
Runner-up: £30,000
Semi-Finalists (2): £11,000
Quarter-Finalists (4): £6,000
Second Round (8): £4,250
First Round (16): £3,000
Women's Champion: £6,000
Runner-up: £2,000
Semi-Finalists (2): £1,000
Quarter-Finalists (4): £500
Nine dart finish: £52,000
Highest checkout: £3,000

Draw

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Men's

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  • Match distances in sets are quoted in brackets at the top of each round. All sets best of five legs, unless there is a final set tie-break
First Round (best of 5 sets) Second round (best of 7) Quarter-Finals (best of 9) Semi-Finals (best of 11) Final (best of 13)
               
1   Tony O'Shea 86.58 3
  Robbie Green 86.07 2
1   Tony O'Shea 94.53 4
  Stephen Bunting 93.96 0
16   Ian White 83.88 0
  Stephen Bunting 91.62 3
1   Tony O'Shea 88.80 5
  Robert Wagner 83.91 1
8   Alan Norris 90.24 2
  Robert Wagner 86.25 3
    Robert Wagner 89.97 4
  Brian Woods 88.47 3
9   Joey ten Berge 89.52 2
  Brian Woods 95.73 3
1   Tony O'Shea 88.29 3
  Dave Chisnall 97.32 6
5   Ted Hankey 92.52 3
  Gary Robson 83.22 0
5   Ted Hankey 86.94 4
  Willy van de Wiel 82.35 1
12   John Walton 82.35 2
  Willy van de Wiel 78.87 3
5   Ted Hankey 88.36 4
  Dave Chisnall 90.42 5
4   Darryl Fitton 86.55 1
  Dave Chisnall 90.21 3
    Dave Chisnall 96.84 4
  Tony West 86.04 2
13   Mark Barilli 81.15 1
  Tony West 79.89 3
  Dave Chisnall 93.42 5
3   Martin Adams 95.01 7
2   Scott Waites 86.79 3
  Paul Hanvidge 70.38 0
2   Scott Waites 91.44 4
15   John Henderson 89.01 1
15   John Henderson 84.99 3
  Mareno Michels 78.78 1
2   Scott Waites 91.62 4
  Martin Phillips 92.13 5
7   Dave Prins 80.22 0
  Martin Phillips 91.41 3
    Martin Phillips 87.60 4
  Paul Carter 83.10 2
10   Martin Atkins 87.18 1
  Paul Carter 83.61 3
  Martin Phillips 92.94 4
3   Martin Adams 97.38 6
6   Ross Montgomery 76.61 2
  Garry Thompson 75.51 3
    Garry Thompson 85.80 4
  Martin McCloskey 83.40 1
11   Steve West 83.79 2
  Martin McCloskey 79.74 3
  Garry Thompson 87.12 2
3   Martin Adams 95.79 5
3   Martin Adams 86.16 3
  Tony Fleet 65.34 0
3   Martin Adams 94.35 4
  Daryl Gurney 85.41 1
14   Scott Mitchell 85.83 2
  Daryl Gurney 91.11 3

Women's

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  • All matches best of three sets, best of five legs
Quarter-finals
2–3 January
Semi-finals
7 January
Final
8 January
         
4   Karen Lawman 75.60 2
  Linda Ithurralde 73.86 0
4   Karen Lawman 73.56 0
  Rhian Edwards 73.92 2
1   Julie Gore 61.05 0
  Rhian Edwards 68.64 2
  Rhian Edwards 68.25 0
2   Trina Gulliver 80.52 2
3   Irina Armstrong 67.20 0
  Deta Hedman 71.49 2
  Deta Hedman 71.79 0
2   Trina Gulliver 79.68 2
2   Trina Gulliver 80.37 2
  Francis Hoenselaar 76.20 0

Television coverage

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The tournament has been broadcast by BBC Sport every year since its inception. Having fronted their coverage since 2001, Ray Stubbs did not host their broadcasts in 2010 following his decision to join ESPN the previous summer. He was replaced by BBC Radio 5 Live and Football on Five presenter Colin Murray. Rob Walker, the Master of Ceremonies at BBC's snooker events and host of the BBC's 2009 Winmau World Masters coverage presented the late night highlights and Darts Extra through the night on BBC2. Walker was also the roaming reporter during BBC2's live coverage. Bobby George once again was the pundit.

The commentary team was David Croft, Tony Green and the tournament's number 1 seed Tony O'Shea. Again, every dart was shown live, via the BBC's interactive coverage on its Red Button service – with the semi-finals and final both broadcast live on BBC1/BBC2 on the last weekend.

In Germany the tournament was broadcast by Eurosport. There was no coverage on SBS in the Netherlands, for the first time in several years as they chose to follow the majority of their players who featured in the PDC World Championship instead.

References

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  1. ^ "Not-so-happy Halloween: Sport's five biggest howlers". Yahoo. 29 October 2018.
  2. ^ "Tony Fleet falls apart against Martin Adams". Daily Mirror. 5 January 2010.
  3. ^ "This clip of the most excruciating three darts ever thrown is a timely reminder of brilliance of PDC". JOE.co.uk. 27 February 2017. Retrieved 12 October 2021.
  4. ^ "Video – Fleet sunk by first-round nerves against Adams". BBC Sport. 4 January 2010.
  5. ^ "WDF men's rankings". British Darts Organisation. Archived from the original on 25 November 2009. Retrieved 22 October 2009.
  6. ^ "WDF women's rankings". British Darts Organisation. Archived from the original on 22 February 2009. Retrieved 22 October 2008.
  7. ^ £100K top prize for men's champion Lakeside World Professional Darts Championship, 27 October 2009
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