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Darts tournament From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
The BDO Gold Cup[1] began in 1978 and was held in Stoke.[2] It was broadcast on the BBC until 1982, with the 1983 tournament blacked out due to a technicians' strike. ITV took over from 1984-1988, and BSB/BSkyB's The Sports Channel/Sky Sports covered the event from 1990-92. It was then broadcast in 2008 on Setanta Sports in the UK, after a brief stint on the short-lived channel Wire TV (1994-95). At the end of its existence, the event was staged at the Magna Centre, Rotherham, England.[3]
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BDO Gold Cup | |
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Tournament information | |
Venue | Magna Centre |
Location | Rotherham (2018) |
Country | Great Britain |
Established | 1978 |
Organisation(s) | BDO, category A /WDF category 1 |
Format | 32 players (men's and women's) |
Prize fund | £14,200 |
Month(s) Played | June |
Final Year | 2019 |
Current champion(s) | |
Jim Williams (Men's) Beau Greaves (Women's) |
Year | Champion (average in final) | Score | Runner-up (average in final) | Total Prize Money |
---|---|---|---|---|
1978 | John Lowe | ?-? | Colin Baker[4] | ? |
1979 | John Lowe[4] | ?-? | Tony Ridler | ? |
1980 | Eric Bristow[4] | ?-? | John Lowe | ? |
1981 | Tony Skuse[4] | ?-? | John Corfe | ? |
1982 | John Lowe | 2–0 | Ritchie Gardner | ? |
1983 | Bob Anderson | beat | Paul Reynolds | ? |
1984 | Cliff Lazarenko | ?-? | Dave Whitcombe | ? |
1985 | Dave Lee | ?-? | Peter Evison | ? |
1986 | Bob Anderson | beat | Robert MacKenzie | ? |
1987 | David Harrold | ?-? | Alan Warriner | ? |
1988 | Chris Whiting | 2-0 | Mike Gregory | ? |
1989 | Chris Johns | 2-0 | Robbie Widdows | ? |
1990 | Rod Harrington | 2–1 | Bob Anderson | ? |
1991 | Dennis Priestley | 2–0 | Steve Beaton | ? |
1992 | Dennis Priestley | 2–0 | Scott Coleman | ? |
1993 | Shayne Burgess | 2–0 | Stewart Rattray | ? |
1994 | Mike Gregory | 3–2 | Fran Lynch | ? |
1995 | Mervyn King | 2–0 | Richie Burnett | ? |
1996 | Paul Whitworth | 2–0 | Al Hedman | ? |
1997 | Sean Palfrey | 2–1 | Mervyn King | ? |
1998 | Peter Johnstone | beat | Peter Manley | ? |
1999 | Ted Hankey | 2–1 | Martin Adams | ? |
2000 | Lee Savage | 2–1 | Martyn Freeman | ? |
2001 | Richie Burnett | beat | Andy Jenkins | ? |
2002 | Tony Eccles | 2–0 | Alan Warriner | ? |
2003 | Brian Derbyshire | 2–0 | Richie Burnett | ? |
2004 | Ritchie Davies[1] | 2–1 | Steve Farmer | ? |
2005 | Derek Williams[1] | 2–1 | Kirk Shepherd | ? |
2006 | Gary Anderson[1] | 2–0 | Robert Hughes | ? |
2007 | Dave Chisnall[1] | 2–0 | Matthew Quinlan | ? |
2008 | Scott Waites[1] | 4–2 | Gary Anderson | ? |
2009 | Paul Brookes[1] | 4–2 | Brian Woods | ? |
2010 | Andy Breadmore[1] | 4–1 | Gary Butcher | ? |
2011 | Ross Montgomery[1] | 3–2 | Paul Carter | ? |
2012[1] | Stephen Bunting | 3–1 | Wayne Warren | ? |
2013 | Paul Hogan[1] | 3–2 | James Wilson | ? |
2014 | Wayne Warren[1] | 3–0 | Pip Blackwell | ? |
2015 | Brian Dawson[1] | 3–0 | Paul Barham | ? |
2016 | Glen Durrant[1] | 6–3 | Paul Hogan | ? |
2017 | Ryan Joyce[1] | 6–3 | Wayne Warren | ? |
2018 | Scott Mitchell[5][1] | 6–4 | Gary Stone | £14,200 |
2019 | Jim Williams[1] | 6–3 | Daniel Ayres | ? |
Year | Champion (average in final) | Score | Runner-up (average in final) | Total Prize Money |
---|---|---|---|---|
2018 | Lisa Ashton[6] | 5–3 | Maria O'Brien | £14,200 |
2019 | Beau Greaves | 5–0 | Fallon Sherrock | £14,200 |
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