John Part
John Part | |
---|---|
File:JohnPart.jpg | |
Personal information | |
Nickname | Darth Maple, King |
Born | |
Home town | Oshawa, Ontario |
Darts information | |
Playing darts since | 1987 |
Darts | 23g Golden Unicorn John Part |
Laterality | Right-handed |
Walk-on music | The Imperial March (Darth Vader's theme from Star Wars) |
Organisation (see split in darts) | |
BDO | 1991 to 1997 |
PDC | since 1997 |
Current world ranking | 4 |
WDF major events – best performances | |
World Ch'ship | Winner 1994 |
World Masters | Last 16 1995, 1997 |
PDC premier events – best performances | |
World Ch'ship | Winner 2003, 2008 |
World Matchplay | Runner-up 2002, 2005 |
World Grand Prix | Runner-up 2002, 2003 |
UK Open | Runner-up 2004 |
Grand Slam | Quarter-final 2007 |
European Ch'ship | First round 2008 |
Premier League | 6th 2005 |
Desert Classic | Winner 2006 |
US Open/WSoD | Semi-final 2007 |
PC Finals | Second round 2009 |
Other tournament wins | |
Tournament | Years |
Syracuse Open Ontario Singles | 1991 1992, '93, '95, '98, 2002, 2003, 2007 |
Other achievements | |
PDC World Number 1 January to June 2003 Member of Oshawa Sports Hall of Fame | |
Updated on January 19, 2008. |
John Part (born June 29, 1966 in Toronto, Ontario) is a Canadian darts player, who is nicknamed Darth Maple.
Part is a three time World Champion. His first world title came at the 1994 BDO World Championship and he later won the other version of the world title, the PDC World Championship in 2003 and again in 2008. He was the first non-British player to win each of these titles. He is the only man other than Phil Taylor to have won the PDC World Championship more than once, and his three world championships, various major television finals and a host of other tournament wins make him the most successful North American darts player ever.
Early career
Part was given a dartboard by his parents as a Christmas present in 1987[1] which gave him the bug to take up the game. He found a pub to practise in Toronto – coincidentally called ‘The Unicorn’ (also the name of his current sponsor) – and success soon followed. He won his first title in 1991 at the Syracuse Open and two years later, Part was Canada's No.1 player.
Another big win came at the 1993 Blueberry Hill Open at Chuck Berry's restaurant in St. Louis, Missouri. He regularly plays the Open to this day.
Rise to Fame
Part was transformed from an unknown Canadian to the top of the game in just one week in 1994. Part had never played in front of television cameras before the 1994 Embassy World Championship and was given an opportunity following an acrimonious split in the game of darts the previous year.
There have been two different versions of the World Championships played each year since 1994. All previous world champions started up the World Darts Council (now Professional Darts Corporation) and the British Darts Organisation continued organising the Embassy World Championship, with only 8 out of 32 players from the previous year's competition re-appearing. This gave an opportunity for previously unheard-of players to participate. Part stormed through to the 1994 final losing only one set en-route. He defeated Bobby George by 6-0 in the final.
Lean Years
Part failed to capitalise on his first World title. In 1995, 1996 and 1997 he won his first round match at the Embassy World Championship - but was knocked out by Paul Williams, Steve Beaton and Roger Carter respectively in the second round.
After the 1997 Embassy World Championship, Part decided to join the PDC and initially his results were just as disappointing. His PDC debut came in the 1997 World Matchplay, losing in the first round 4-8 to American Drew O'Neill. He also lost in the first round of the event for the next three years.
His PDC World Championship debut came in 1998, winning his first group match against Paul Lim - but lost 3-1 to Peter Evison and failed to progress to the knock-out stages.
PDC Success
Template:Darts player form It wasn't until 2001, some four years after joining the PDC that Part began to make an impact on the circuit. He made it to the final of the 2001 PDC World Darts Championship losing to Taylor, who averaged a record 107.46 in the final.
But Part's resurgence continued - he reached the finals of the 2002 World Matchplay and the 2002 World Grand Prix. Again, Taylor was the man who ended his run.
Part finally beat Taylor in the 2003 PDC World Darts Championship final in Purfleet. Taylor was 1/7 favourite to win[2], but Part took the first leg with a 121 checkout, and then roared into a 3-0 set lead. Part was still in control at 4-1 when Taylor suddenly hit form, winning 11 straight legs on his way to a 5-4 lead. Part then hit back with pressure doubles to take the 10th set and break Taylor in the final leg of the 11th.
At 6-5, with Part needing only to hold his darts to win the title, Taylor broke back to force a deciding set. However, when the crunch came, Taylor struggled to find his range and Part stayed calm to break the throw and hold on for victory.
Part became PDC world number one after his world title win in 2003 and proved himself to be one of only a few players capable of beating Taylor, when he knocked the Power out of the 2005 World Matchplay in the quarter-final. This ended a potential grand slam (winning all televised tournaments in a year) by Taylor and his record 28 matches unbeaten run in the tournament.
He dropped down the world rankings somewhat in 2005 and 2006, but still enjoyed a major championship success in July 2006, when he added the Las Vegas Desert Classic trophy to his haul of championship wins, beating Raymond van Barneveld, 6 sets to 3 in the final. Following this, Part was a consistent semi-finalist in 2007, reaching this stage in three televised events: the US Open, the Desert Classic, and the World Grand Prix. He also reached the quarter-finals of the inaugural Grand Slam of Darts (losing to Taylor) and had moved back up to 11 in the world rankings by the end of 2007.
Ending a successful year, Part won the 2008 PDC World Darts Championship with a 7-2 victory over Kirk Shepherd, winning the first four sets on his way to victory and joining Taylor, van Barneveld, Eric Bristow and John Lowe as the only players to have won a World Championship more than twice.[3] With this win he also became only one of two players to have won the PDC World Darts Championship more than once, the other player being Taylor. Part also became the first dart player to win the World Championship in three different venues – having won the 1994 BDO at Lakeside, the 2003 PDC at Circus Tavern and the 2008 PDC at Alexandra Palace. This has since been equalled by Taylor.
Despite winning the World Championship, Part had an indifferent 2008. He finished bottom of the 2008 Premier League and suffered early exits in the US Open, Desert Classic and the European Championship. He did however reach the quarter finals of the World Grand Prix.
Part was defeated in the first round of the 2009 PDC World Darts Championship, losing 3-0 to American Bill Davis - the second time in which Part has lost his first match in the World Championship, having won the title the previous year (he was knocked out by Mark Dudbridge in 2004 having won the title in 2003). Part was defeated by Kirk Shepherd in the second round of the 2010 world championship in a repeat of the 2008 final, only recording a 76 average in a 4-1 loss. This result means Part will drop down the rankings and will not appear in the forthcoming premier league.
Television Commentary
In June 1994, BBC commentator Sid Waddell decided to leave the BBC to join Sky Television. This left just Tony Green as the only commentator on the event. Part is considered to be one of the games's best "counters" or "spotters" (the ability to work out scoring shots or where the next dart may be thrown). This knowledge is essential to a darts commentator and contributed to Part being chosen by the BBC to join Green in the commentary box during the latter stages of the 1995 Embassy World Championships.
Despite his decision to play in the PDC World Championship from 1998 onwards, he was a regular in the BBC commentary box up until 2007. He missed work for two days of the 2003 Embassy World Championship [4] due to the fact he was winning the PDC World Championship at the time.
He also missed the 2007 Winmau World Masters, a tournament which he would usually commentate on, alongside Green and David Croft, but he decided to take part in the first-ever Grand Slam of Darts in Wolverhampton instead. After being in the BBC commentary box from 1995-2007, he was not at the Lakeside Country Club for the 2008 and 2009 tournaments.
References
- ^ Biography from Part's web site
- ^ Guardian report on 2003 final
- ^ Superb Part storms to PDC title BBC News, 1 January 2008
- ^ Interview with John Part