Dave Whitcombe

English darts player (born 1954) From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

David Whitcombe (born 27 June 1954) is an English former professional darts player who won several major tournaments, he was twice a winner of the Winmau World Masters (1982 and 1985) and lost to Eric Bristow in two World Championship finals in 1984 and 1986.

FullnameDavid Whitcombe
Nickname"The Man with No Nickname"
Born (1954-06-27) 27 June 1954 (age 71)
Chatham, Kent, England
HometownSittingbourne, Kent, England
Quick facts Personal information, Full name ...
Dave Whitcombe
Whitcombe in 1985
Personal information
Full nameDavid Whitcombe
Nickname"The Man with No Nickname"
Born (1954-06-27) 27 June 1954 (age 71)
Chatham, Kent, England
Home townSittingbourne, Kent, England
Darts information
Darts22g Signature
LateralityRight-handed
Walk-on music"Can You Feel the Force?" by The Real Thing
Organisation (see split in darts)
BDO1978–1992
PDC2004–2007
WDF major events – best performances
World ChampionshipRunner-up: 1984, 1986
World MastersWinner (2): 1982, 1985
PDC premier events – best performances
World ChampionshipLast 64: 2006
Other tournament wins
TournamentYears
Finnish Open
Swedish Open
British Matchplay
News of the World Ch'ship
1985
1985, 1987, 1990
1987

1989
Updated on 7 December 2007.
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Early life

Dave was born on 27 June 1954 in Chatham, Kent.[1] After leaving school at age 15, he worked as an apprentice electrician at Chatham Dockyard, often playing darts during lunchtime.[1] He joined a local team, and in his first season, won the league singles tournament.[2] At age 20, he was selected to play for Kent,[1] and in 1975, he quit his job to concentrate on entering darts tournaments.[1]

Darts career

He made his debut in the 1978 BDO World Darts Championship.[3] He won the News of the World Darts Championship in 1989,[3] the British Matchplay, the Swedish Open 3 times, the Finland Open, the Marlboro Masters and Dunlop Masters tournaments.[3] He was also a prolific county and holiday camp open winner.[3]

He played for and captained Kent in the inter counties league, winning the BDO (Darts World Magazine Sponsored) Tons Trophy and individual averages.[3] In one season, he managed to win all 9 man of the match awards (5 consecutively),[1] beating 9 England International players in the process, earning him an England call-up in 1981.[1]

His overall World Championship record also included three quarter-final appearances in 1983, 1989, 1991, and the semi-finals in 1985.[3] Bristow must be considered as Whitcombe's nemesis at the World Championship.[3] In his 13 appearances at the championships, Whitcombe met Bristow six times and lost every time, including a quarter final in 1991 where Whitcombe lost 3–4 despite having been three sets and two legs up at one stage.[3] However, in other Major championships like the British Matchplay and the World Masters, Whitcombe defeated Bristow in both the semi and finals.[3] Whitcombe also defeated Phil Taylor in the first round of the 1988 British Professional, which was Taylor's first televised appearance, but lost in 2 finals, both to Jocky Wilson.[3]

Whitcombe helped form the players' association WPDPA (World Professional Dart Players' Association) with John Lowe, Cliff Lazarenko, and Tony Brown.[2] The association was set up with the intention of promoting more televised tournaments after the big slump of televised darts in 1989 and the early 1990s. Eventually this organisation linked up with the newly formed World Darts Council in 1992, and darts was soon split into two organisations.[2]

Whitcombe never actually joined the PDC darts circuit at its outset – choosing instead to virtually retire from the sport in 1992.[2] He made a comeback in 2004 – rejoining the PDPA and the PDC circuit.[2] In his comeback later, he managed to qualify for the 2006 PDC World Championship, losing to Roland Scholten in the first round.[4]

In May 2008, Whitcombe once again graced the big stage in a televised tournament, taking part in the BetFred League of Legends which was shown live on Setanta Sports, playing along with Bristow, Lowe, Lazarenko, Bobby George, Peter Evison, Keith Deller, and the eventual winner Bob Anderson. Whitcombe led the league after the first 4 weeks and was the standout player of the league at that time.[2] Whitcombe's form slumped in the following league weeks, but he still looked on course to cruise into the semi-finals as he was in second place after week 5 and in third place after week 6. However, on the final league night on week 7, due to his own loss to Deller and the match between Evison and Lazarenko ending in a draw, Whitcombe slumped to fifth and failed to reach the semi-final stage.[2]

World Championship results

BDO

  • 1980: Second Round (lost to Bobby George 0–2) (sets)
  • 1981: Second Round (lost to Eric Bristow 0–2)
  • 1982: Second Round (lost to Steve Brennan 0–2)
  • 1983: Quarter-final (lost to Eric Bristow 3–4)
  • 1984: Final (lost to Eric Bristow 1–7)
  • 1985: Semi-final (lost to Eric Bristow 2–5)
  • 1986: Final (lost to Eric Bristow 0–6)
  • 1987: First Round (lost to Bob Sinnaeve 2–3)
  • 1988: First round (lost to Peter Evison 1–3)
  • 1989: Quarter-final (lost to Bob Anderson 3–4)
  • 1990: First Round (lost to Chris Whiting 2–3)
  • 1991: Quarter-finals (lost to Eric Bristow 3–4)
  • 1992: First Round (lost to Per Skau 1–3)

PDC

Career finals

BDO

Whitcombe appeared in BDO major finals 9 times with a record of 3 wins and 6 runners-up.

More information Legend ...
Legend
World Championship (0–2)
World Masters (2–0)
British Professional (0–2)
British Matchplay (1–2)
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More information Outcome, No. ...
Outcome No. Year Championship Opponent in the final Score[Note 1]
Winner 1. 1982 Winmau World Masters (1) England Jocky Wilson 2–1 (s)
Runner-up 1. 1982 British Matchplay England Eric Bristow 0–2 (s)
Runner-up 2. 1983 British Professional Championship England Jocky Wilson 2–7 (s)
Runner-up 3. 1984 World Darts Championship England Eric Bristow 1–7 (s)
Winner 2. 1985 Winmau World Masters (2) England Ray Farrell 3–0 (s)
Runner-up 4. 1986 World Darts Championship England Eric Bristow 0–6 (s)
Runner-up 5. 1986 British Matchplay England Eric Bristow 1–3 (s)
Runner-up 6. 1986 British Professional Championship England Jocky Wilson 6–7 (s)
Winner 3. 1987 British Matchplay England Eric Bristow 3–0 (s)
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Independent major finals: 2 (1 title)

More information Outcome, No. ...
Outcome No. Year Championship Opponent in the final Score
Runner-up 1. 1980 News of the World Championship Sweden Stefan Lord 0–2 (l)
Winner 1. 1989 News of the World Championship England Dennis Priestley 2–1 (l)
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Note

  1. (l) = score in legs, (s) = score in sets.

Performance timeline

More information Tournament, 1993–2005 ...
Tournament197919801981198219831984198519861987198819891990199119921993–200520062007200820092010
BDO World Championship DNP L16 L16 L16 QF RU SF RU L32 L32 QF L32 QF L32 DNP
Winmau World Masters L16 QF SF W L64 L32 W QF L32 L32 QF L16 QF DNP L136 L72
British Matchplay Did not play RU QF QF QF RU W QF QF Did not play Not held
British Professional Not held SF QF RU QF SF RU L16 SF Not held
Butlins Grand Masters DNP SF L16 QF SF QF QF L16 Not held
MFI World Matchplay Not held SF L16 L16 L16 L16 Not held
PDC World Championship Not yet founded L64 DNP
News of the World Darts Championship ??? RU ??? L16 ??? W ??? Not held
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More information Tournament, Event ...
WDF majors performances
TournamentEventEuro Cup 1982World Cup 1983Euro Cup 1984World Cup 1985Euro Cup 1986
WDF World Cup &

WDF Europe Cup

Singles SF SF QF DNP SF
Pairs L16 QF W SF
Team W W W W
Overall W W W W
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[5][6]

More information Performance Table Legend ...
Performance Table Legend
W Won the tournament F Finalist SF Semifinalist QF Quarterfinalist #R
RR
L#
Lost in # round
Round-robin
Last # stage
DQ Disqualified
DNQ Did not qualify DNP Did not participate WD Withdrew NH Tournament not held NYF Not yet founded
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References

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