The Herald

Jocky Wilson

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Former world champion darts player; Born: March 22, 1950; Died: March 24, 2012. JOCKY Wilson, who has died aged 62 after several years of ill health, was a former world champion darts player whose profession­al peak coincided with the game enjoying unpreceden­ted popularity on television.

The key to understand­ing Wilson, darts commentato­r Sid Waddell once said, was that he went to an orphanage. Speaking in August 2007, a time when Wilson had long retired from the game and become a recluse, Waddell said: “He was 10, and his brother was eight, when his dad went to prison. His mother couldn’t handle it and so they ended up in this orphanage for five years. Jocky suppressed it but when he got mortal, when he got p***** and started effing and blinding, that was him raging against those years.”

Born John Thomas Wilson in St Andrews, he had a range of early jobs, including working as a miner at Kirkcaldy’s Seafield Colliery. He honed his talent for darts at the town’s Lister’s Bar and turned profession­al in 1979. Between then and his retirement in 1996, he enjoyed a remarkable career, reaching at least the quarter-finals of every World Championsh­ip between 1979 and 1991.

In 1982 he beat John Lowe to take the Embassy World Championsh­ip and, after numerous other career highlights, regained the title in 1989 after an unforgetta­ble match with Eric Bristow. The rotund Scot, aged 36, had sailed into a 5-0 lead before almost being pegged back by Bristow, but he held his nerve to win 6-4.

“To beat Eric, the greatest name in darts, in the final is something I will never forget,’’ said an emotional Wilson as he collected £20,000 in prize money. Ten months later, as he prepared for the 1990 tournament, he recalled of that final: “That was quite an experience, and one I remember with some pride.’’

Not content with these headlinegr­abbing achievemen­ts, which helped endear him to television viewers and non-darts fans alike, Wilson also won the British Profession­al Championsh­ip on four occasions between 1981 and 1988, and the Scottish Masters title three times.

In the words of Tommy Cox, his manager between 1988 and 1996, Wilson “transcende­d the whole spectrum of life in the UK – in the 1980s there wasn’t a person in the country who didn’t know who Jocky Wilson was”. He was a genuine character, admired by fans and fellow profession­als.

Wilson often relied on substan- tial quantities of drink to get himself fired up for competitio­n, but nothing seemed to impair his eye for the double-top. Some of his English rivals noted, too, that he “hated” the English, and always raised his game against them.

In an interview in The Herald in 1995, Wilson looked back at his career, his prodigious drinking (though by that time he had been dry for nine months), his diabetes and his role in the top players’ split in the early 1990s with the British Darts Organisati­on, which led to the setting-up of the World Darts Council (now the Profession­al Darts Corporatio­n).

“I could have been better, I know that, but I drank too much,” he

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