1992 BDO World Darts Championship

The 1992 Embassy World Darts Championship was held from 3–11 January 1992 at the Lakeside Country Club, Frimley Green, Surrey.

Embassy World Darts Championship
Tournament information
Dates3–11 January 1992
VenueLakeside Country Club
LocationFrimley Green, Surrey
CountryEngland
Organisation(s)BDO
FormatSets
Final – best of 11
Prize fund£119,500
Winner's share£28,000
High checkout170 Australia Keith Sullivan
Champion(s)
England Phil Taylor[1]
«1991 1993»

With Eric Bristow and defending champion Dennis Priestley both going out in round two, the way was paved for the top two seeds, Phil Taylor and Mike Gregory, to make it to the final – notably, the first final since the inauguration of the World Championship in 1978 that featured neither Bristow nor John Lowe.

In a titanic affair, full of big scores and high checkouts, it went to the final set and a tiebreak, where Gregory missed two chances each at double 8, double top and double 10 for the title. It also made Gregory the first player to miss darts at double to win a world championship and eventually lose; none would match this until Mark McGeeney in 2018.

Taylor took full advantage and sent the match to a sudden-death leg, which he won to take his second World title. Taylor's match-winning average of 97.58 remained a record for a BDO world championship final until the tournament's demise in 2020.

Seeds edit

  1.   Phil Taylor
  2.   Mike Gregory
  3.   Dennis Priestley
  4.   John Lowe
  5.   Bob Anderson
  6.   Jocky Wilson
  7.   Keith Sullivan
  8.   Eric Bristow

Prize money edit

The prize fund was £116,400.

Champion: £28,000
Runner-Up: £14,000
Semi-Finalists (2): £7,000
Quarter-Finalists (4): £3,500
Last 16 (8): £2,600
Last 32 (16): £1,600

There was also a 9 Dart Checkout prize of £52,000, along with a High Checkout prize of £1,500.

The Results edit

First Round (best of 5 sets) Second Round (best of 5 sets) Quarter-Finals (best of 7 sets) Semi-Finals (best of 9 sets) Final (best of 11 sets)
               
1   Phil Taylor (93.36) 3
  Magnus Caris (78.81) 1
1   Phil Taylor (94.65) 3
  Per Skau (86.94) 1
    Per Skau (84.39) 3
  Dave Whitcombe (78.81) 1
1   Phil Taylor (98.49) 4
  Martin Phillips (88.74) 0
8   Eric Bristow (83.67) 3
  Jann Hoffmann (80.61) 0
8   Eric Bristow (88.38) 2
  Martin Phillips (91.14) 3
    Martin Phillips (82.26) 3
  Bert Vlaardingerbroek (74.34) 0
1   Phil Taylor (91.47) 5
4   John Lowe (88.98) 4
5   Bob Anderson (89.55) 3
  Ronnie Baxter (91.68) 1
5   Bob Anderson (85.92) 2
  Graham Miller (79.38) 3
    Graham Miller (82.95) 3
  Frans Devooght (82.65) 1
  Graham Miller (86.46) 3
4   John Lowe (92.25) 4
4   John Lowe (90.51) 3
  Oyvind Aasland (85.65) 0
4   John Lowe (92.83) 3
  Paul Lim (79.74) 0
    Paul Lim (86.34) 3
  Bob Sinnaeve (83.43) 1
1   Phil Taylor (97.58) 6
2   Mike Gregory (94.42) 5
2   Mike Gregory (85.41) 3
  Wayne Weening (79.32) 1
2   Mike Gregory (86.82) 3
  Chris Johns (84.36) 0
    Chris Johns (79.98) 3
  Steve Beaton (77.45) 1
2   Mike Gregory (90.33) 4
  Rod Harrington (92.43) 3
7   Keith Sullivan (85.20) 3
  Peter Evison (85.05) 1
7   Keith Sullivan (94.44) 2
  Rod Harrington (93.15) 3
    Rod Harrington (89.91) 3
  Stefan Nagy (69.93) 0
2   Mike Gregory (90.78) 5
  Kevin Kenny (86.28) 3
6   Jocky Wilson (80.73) 1
  Kevin Kenny (85.02) 3
    Kevin Kenny (89.85) 3
  Jamie Harvey (88.95) 2
    Jamie Harvey (81.15) 3
  Heikki Hermunen (77.76) 0
    Kevin Kenny (89.82) 4
  Alan Warriner (88.71) 0
3   Dennis Priestley (90.93) 3
  Larry Butler (85.23) 1
3   Dennis Priestley (93.99) 2
  Alan Warriner (91.56) 3
    Alan Warriner (86.34) 3
  Alex Lister (77.49) 0

References edit

  1. ^ Staff (20 July 2002), "History of Embassy Darts", BBC Sports (online), BBC News, retrieved 23 February 2011