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The World Masters was first broadcast on television by [[ITV]] in 1979 for four years. The event in 1984 and 1985 were not shown but returned to ITV in 1986 for two years. After that, it was not screened on free-to-air television until 2001, where the [[BBC]] broadcast the tournament to today. [[Sky Sports]] broadcast the event for one year in 1991, with [[Eurosport]] occasionally picking up the rights for some years, however in other years the event was not broadcast.
The World Masters was first broadcast on television by [[ITV]] in 1979 for four years. The event in 1984 and 1985 were not shown but returned to ITV in 1986 for two years. After that, it was not screened on free-to-air television until 2001, where the [[BBC]] broadcast the tournament to today. [[Sky Sports]] broadcast the event for one year in 1991, with [[Eurosport]] occasionally picking up the rights for some years, however in other years the event was not broadcast.


There is speculation that Bradders is a ginger gayer, but this is yet to be televised.
There is speculation that Worldwide leaders [[ESPN]] have picked up the rights to the 2011 event<ref>http://www.dartfreakz.nl/index.php?option=com_content&view=article&id=5341:winmau-world-masters-opnieuw-naar-hull&catid=3:wdfbdo-hoofdnieuws&Itemid=677</ref> .


==References==
==References==

Revision as of 08:39, 30 June 2011

Winmau World Masters
Tournament information
VenueHull City Hall
LocationKingston upon Hull, Yorkshire
CountryEngland
Established1974
Organisation(s)BDO/WDF
FormatSets
Month(s) PlayedVaries between September-December
Current champion(s)
England Martin Adams
Wales Julie Gore

The Winmau World Masters is one of the longest running and most prestigious professional darts tournaments, which began in 1974 - even before the current World Professional Championship. The tournament has been sponsored by Darts board manufacturer, Winmau for 30 years and they have currently extended their contract to sponsor the event until 2015.[1]

It was previously the final leg of the BDO’s Grand Slam title of televised majors, along with the Topic International Darts League, the Bavaria World Darts Trophy and the Lakeside World Professional Championship. However, it is now one of only two major BDO events and is considered to be the second biggest tournament after the World Championship. The champion is prestigiously referred to as the World Master.

Sponsors

1974-1975 Phonogram
1976–present Winmau

Venues

[2] 1974-1976 West Centre Hotel, Fulham
1977-1981 Wembley Conference Centre (finals were played at Horticultural Hall, Victoria, London in 1978 due to electrician's industrial action at Wembley)
1982-1989 Rainbow Suite, Kensington
1990-1991 Ramada Inn. Lillie Road, West London
1992-1995 Earls Court, London
1996-1997 Paragon Hotel, Lillie Road, London
1998-2001 Lakeside Country Club, Frimley Green Surrey
2002-2005 Bridlington Spa Royal Hall
2006-2007 Leisure World, Bridlington
2008-2009 Bridlington Spa Royal Hall
2010-present Hull City Hall

Records

Most tournament wins 5 - Eric Bristow. Bob Anderson and Martin Adams have both notched 3 wins (also both achieving 'hatricks' by winning in three consecutive years). Dave Whitcombe, John Lowe and Raymond van Barneveld have won the Masters twice each.

Youngest champion Michael van Gerwen (2006) aged 17 years, 174 days eclipsed the record of Eric Bristow

Double Champion Leeanne Maddock (1992) Aged 17 years won both the youth title and women's title.

Joint World Championship & Masters Champions Only five players have ever won the World Masters and the World Professional Championship in the same season. Eric Bristow achieved the feat three times (1979 Masters 1980 World, 1983–84 and 1984–85). Bob Anderson (1987–88), Richie Burnett (1994–95), John Walton (2000–01) and Martin Adams (2009–10) were the others. There have been two other instances of players holding both championships at the same time (Phil Taylor 1990 and Raymond van Barneveld 2005) - but these were not during the same season which is considered to end with the World Championship.

There are 12 players who have won the Masters and World Professional during their careers - Bristow, Anderson, Walton and Burnett plus John Lowe, Phil Taylor, Dennis Priestley, Steve Beaton, Les Wallace, Andy Fordham, Raymond van Barneveld and Martin Adams.

Winners

Year Men's World Masters Women's World Masters Boy's World Masters Girl's World Masters
1974 England Cliff Inglis
1975 Wales Alan Evans
1976 England John Lowe
1977 England Eric Bristow
1978 Wales Ronnie Davies
1979 England Eric Bristow
1980 England John Lowe
1981 England Eric Bristow
1982 England Dave Whitcombe Wales Ann Marie Davies
1983 England Eric Bristow England Sonja Ralphs
1984 England Eric Bristow England Kathy Wones
1985 England Dave Whitcombe New Zealand Lilian Barnett
1986 England Bob Anderson England Kathy Wones Singapore Harith Lim (World Youth Masters)
1987 England Bob Anderson Wales Ann Thomas[disambiguation needed] England Sean Bell (World Youth Masters)
1988 England Bob Anderson England Mandy Solomons England Sean Dowling (World Youth Masters)
1989 England Peter Evison England Mandy Solomons England Dennis Beisser (World Youth Masters)
1990 England Phil Taylor Wales Rhian Speed England Craig Claney (World Youth Masters)
1991 England Rod Harrington United States Sandy Reitan England Michael Barnard (World Youth Masters)
1992 England Dennis Priestley Wales Leeanne Maddock Wales Leeanne Maddock (World Youth Masters)
1993 England Steve Beaton England Mandy Solomons England Jamie Caven (World Youth Masters)
1994 Wales Richie Burnett England Deta Hedman Belgium Steven de Brucker (World Youth Masters)
1995 Belgium Erik Clarys England Sharon Colclough England Martin Whatmough (World Youth Masters)
1996 England Colin Monk Scotland Sharon Douglas Germany Carsten Hoffmann (World Youth Masters)
1997 Australia Graham Hunt England Mandy Solomons England Aaron Turner (World Youth Masters)
1998 Scotland Les Wallace England Karen Smith Wales Paul Higgins (World Youth Masters)
1999 England Andy Fordham Netherlands Francis Hoenselaar England Martin Brown Wales Janine Gough
2000 England John Walton England Trina Gulliver England Danny Ballard Wales Janine Gough
2001 Netherlands Raymond van Barneveld Scotland Anne Kirk England Stephen Bunting Russia Anastasia Dobromyslova
2002 England Mark Dudbridge England Trina Gulliver Scotland Sean McDonald Scotland Lynsey McDonald
2003 England Tony West England Trina Gulliver England Kirk Shepherd England Stevis Riggs
2004 England Mervyn King England Trina Gulliver Sweden Oskar Lukasiak Russia Irene Adrianova
2005 Netherlands Raymond van Barneveld England Trina Gulliver Netherlands Jonny Nijs England Laura Tye
2006 Netherlands Michael van Gerwen Netherlands Francis Hoenselaar Netherlands Maarten Pape Wales Kimberley Lewis
2007 Scotland Robert Thornton Netherlands Karin Krappen England Shaun Griffiths Wales Kimberley Lewis
2008 England Martin Adams Netherlands Francis Hoenselaar England Shaun Griffiths Sweden Linda Odén
2009 England Martin Adams England Linda Ithurralde Wales Jamie Lewis England Zoe Jones
2010 England Martin Adams Wales Julie Gore England Reece Robinson England Zoe Jones

Media coverage

The World Masters was first broadcast on television by ITV in 1979 for four years. The event in 1984 and 1985 were not shown but returned to ITV in 1986 for two years. After that, it was not screened on free-to-air television until 2001, where the BBC broadcast the tournament to today. Sky Sports broadcast the event for one year in 1991, with Eurosport occasionally picking up the rights for some years, however in other years the event was not broadcast.

There is speculation that Bradders is a ginger gayer, but this is yet to be televised.

References