DARTOID'S
WORLD
Top
Ten Dart Websites worldwide
I receive a lot of e-mails
from people asking questions about the sport of darts. I try to be as
helpful as I can.
“S’up, Dahtoid? Yo. I be new ta da game but
wants ta learn. Name’s Antonio. From Joisey. Where’s da bes’
place ta check out some smokin’ action?”
“Nigel here. BLIMEY! I lost me blasted darts. Tell
me old boy, where might I locate a brilliant set? Cheers.”
“Hey buddy. It’s Ed-Bob. One of our shots
down the Roadhouse got busted for DUI and can’t get to matches no
more. Where can I find a hot new teammate? Write back soon.”
“G’day Dartoid. Kevin Berlyn here. I just
got a new board. Tell me matey, where’s th’ best place to
hang it? Arrrr.”
Pretty much, I always give the same response. I find that
“Hooters” leaves most of my readers satisfied.
But, the other day somebody asked a real toughie. “Hey, you frickin’
wanker. Where do you steal the shit you write? PS: this is the Lord.”
Well, the answer to that one ain’t Hooters. Not that I haven’t
gone there in search of material…
The answer is the Internet.
Yes, there’s all sorts of wonderful information about the sport
of darts to be found these days by simply typing “www” and
a dot and a small string of letters into a computer. I do it everyday
when I should be working.
So I’m kind of an expert when it comes to surfing the Information
Highway for information about darts. Barely ten years ago, there were
only some fifty sites out there dedicated to our sport. Some guy from
Switzerland named George Vacek scoped them all out and created a super-site
called “George’s List of Darts Sites.” But apparently
George died or something. This forerunner of the plethora of sites that
currently exists (34 billion as of yesterday) has vanished from the ether.
Anyway, after years of research and with all due respect for George who
first stepped foot into the jungle of darts on the Internet (and who once
directed me to a couple of bars in Zurich), I now feel qualified to recommend
the Top Ten Darts Sites in the WORLD today.
I visit each of them regularly and rip off everything I can.
DISCLAIMER. The list that follows is in no particular order. Each and
every one of these sites offers something extraordinary. For example,
most of them carry my column.
The reason I have declined to formally order the sites is because I always
make my best effort not to piss people off. All of my regular readers,
particularly those of the well-endowed female persuasion, will seriously
question this statement.
Still, to order the list would risk offending someone, possibly even a
female somebody. And that would be just plain stupid.
So here’s the list:
www.passionatedarter.com by Sherilyn Herkey
www.planetdarts.co.uk by Gayle Farmer
www.bullseyenews.com by Jay Tomlinson
www.dartplayersaustralia.com by Kevin Berlyn
www.crowsdarts.com by Tim Cronian
www.phillydarts.com by Mike Broderick
www.john-lowe.net by John Lowe
www.patrickchaplin.com by Patrick Chaplin
www.adadarters.com by Glenn Remick
www.cyberdarts.com by Rick Osgood
www.dartbase.com by Karlheinz Zochling
The first thing you may have noticed about the list is
that there are eleven entries, not just ten as suggested in the title
to this column. This is because I can’t count. If you’ve seen
me throw darts you will appreciate that I am being completely honest about
this.
Your second observation might be that the first two entries are for the
only two sites created and run by women. Of course, this is by design
and not meant in any way to denigrate the quality of the sites themselves.
Both are amazing. I list them at the front end of the list only because
I love fronts and ends.
Sherilyn Herkey created www.passionatedarter.com a couple of years ago
for some class she was taking about auto mechanics. She set out to design
a web site about vintage cars. This is the result. She failed the course
(of course, of course) but continued to follow her passion.
She has catapulted her project into one of the more unique and interesting
sites on the Web today. Buried here is an exhaustive listing of books
about darts, dating back to the 1930’s, and tips on how to find
them. There is also a collection of interviews including one with John
Lowe that simply has to be among the best ever conducted.
The Professional Darts Corporation’s (PDC) site, www.planetdarts.co.uk,
is simply out of this world and that’s not just because it’s,
strictly technically speaking, based in another world. This site is as
good as it gets for three reasons and they’re all Gayle Farmer.
This woman can WRITE. I stop by the PDC site every morning to read whatever
fresh news Farmer has to report on happenings at the apex of the world
of darts. Here you can watch Phil Taylor’s 9-darter, read John Part’s
outstanding discourse on practice and preparation and follow the rankings
of the best of the best in our sport.
You can even sign up to receive text alerts to your cell phone, in real
time, of the scores of PDC competitions. About the only thing you won’t
find here is my column. That’s because the PDC think’s I’m
a sexist, vulgar scumbag from America, which is, again strictly technically
speaking, true.
Of course, Jay Tomlinson’s (and Mike Harris’) www.bullseyenews.com
is the electronic issue of Hustler Magazine. No. NO! That’s a filthy
lie and another example of why the PDC won’t carry my column. Here’s
something that is true: unlike Hustler publisher, Larry Flynt, Tomlinson
is not running for governor of California.
And here’s another fact: unlike Flynt’s garbage, Tomlinson’s
site and magazine are worth reading - indeed a must-read -
for anybody who cares about the sport of darts, steel or soft, national
or international, professional or recreational.
I check this site often for its up-to-date calendar of tournaments and
results coverage. And I love columnist Dick Allix, who’s featured
here. His most recent column began: “I want to talk about women.”
Yep, Tomlinson’s site carries my kind of stuff. I highly recommend
that you bookmark this page.
Australia’s Kevin Berlyn has to be considered The King when it comes
to creativity in darts web site development. His site, www.dartplayersaustralia.com,
as creative as it is in its own right, has served as a launch pad for
his talents. Today Berlyn’s skills are highly sought after throughout
the darting community.
For example, it is Berlyn who created John Lowe’s site. But Berlyn’s
own site is more than just a creative package; it’s crammed with
information about the Australian and international darts scene. I stop
in regularly because I enjoy the tickle of indigenous words - like
“Wool-loomooloo” and “Cootamundra” - as
they stir around in my head. These are the names of actual towns in Australia.
The people in these towns throw darts and have Platypuses for pets.
If there’s a more comprehensive site out there today than Alabama’s
Tim Cronian’s www.crowsdarts.com, I can’t imagine where it
is to be found. There are also very few that have been around longer -
Cronian’s site has been up and running for nearly a decade.
Here you’ll find the most complete list of links to leagues to be
found anywhere on the Internet. You’ll also find a compendium of
almost 4,000 darts pubs to check out all over the world.
If you’re looking for information on anything from equipment to
ladders for organizing a Luck of the Draw this is the site to visit. This
is also the only venue I know of where one can enjoy Lance Kent’s
“Da Doofus” column about the sport.
AND, it’s one of only a handful of sites where a visitor doesn’t
have to cast about aimlessly for new content. Cronian has set up a little
“update” icon that takes you immediately to the most recent
additions.
What Mike Broderick has accomplished with www.phillydarts.com is special
- particularly to those darters who surf the Net from the center
of the universe (translation: Philadelphia). Broderick’s 2001 creation
has rapidly become The Place to Go if you live in Philly, love darts,
and want to know what’s happening around you. And this is saying
a lot.
Philly’s an unusual place. Getting anyone in this city, particularly
those involved in darts, to consider that anyone else might, just maybe,
have a little information that could be useful to them is not the least
bit easy to accomplish. But Broderick has.
He hosts league information for five leagues in the city and updates league-related
data weekly. He’s established a chat site that has mushroomed from
mere local participation into a venue now frequented by darters from all
over the world. His message forum is crammed with action. In but two years
time more than 100,000 people have visited the site.
I asked Broderick to what he credited his success. His answer was as simple
as it was obvious. “The thing about my site is the people of Philadelphia.
They are constantly giving me great content to publish. Without them the
site would be blank.” The answer is that Broderick understands his
audience.
I check John Lowe’s site, www.john-lowe.net, pretty much every day
- even though (while it’s updated very often) it’s not
exactly updated every day. Few sites are. The thing is, even knowing this,
I check in religiously because I hope that it is.
What I most appreciate about Lowe’s site is his News (and views)
section. I ask you: where else with nothing but a click can one read commentary
about current goings-on by someone who has been there and done it ALL
in any sport and then click another button and correspond with that person?
You can do all this and more at Lowe’s site.
If you’ve got the time, you can peruse a partial listing of his
tournament victories - more than a thousand. You can watch Lowe’s
televised 9-darter in 1984, the first ever - thrown two big, fat
decades before Phil Taylor pegged his. This site is as unique as they
come, packed to the gills with tips, quotes and tidbits that convey something
very rare coming as they do straight from Da Man who, hopefully, will
buy me a couple of jars for writing such nice things about him.
Nowhere is there a darts-related web site more unique than the one created
by the Dr. of Darts, Patrick Chaplin. Where there are similarities between
other sites, Chaplin’s www.patrickchaplin.com venue is in a league
of its own.
Now here’s a bloke (translation: a dude from England) who is actually,
formally (really!) writing his doctoral dissertation about the social
history of darts in Britain. What this means, in real terms, I honestly
don’t know. I think it might be a long paper about beer. Whatever
it is or will be when it’s completed, Chaplin’s process of
getting there (revealing the real history of darts) has produced some
incredible revelations and “exploded some myths” - and
a boatload of this information is to be found at his site.
Damn, it makes for great reading! Perhaps you’ve heard the old story
about how dart boards used to be made out of pig’s hair?
Well, according to Chaplin, this is not so. They were made out of hedgehog
hair. Then there’s the old tale about how the Pilgrims threw darts
on the Mayflower. No way Jose, not according to Chaplin. What the Pilgrims
played was conkers.
Want to know why the numbers are arranged as they are on the board, why
the oche’s called the oche, how fast the average dart flies? Check
this site out. The man’s a genius.
The American Darters Association (ADA) web site, www.adadarters.com, established
by Glenn Remick, has been chugging along since 1997. And it just gets
better and better. With the aim of keeping the burgeoning ADA membership
current on goings-on within the league, Remick’s has designed a
system whereby his franchisees are able to electronically transmit information
to the ADA office.
Remick then updates the site twice daily. So, unlike the rest of us who
have to wait until the end of each week to see where we and our team stand
(assuming our captain wasn’t too drunk to shove the score-sheet
into a mailbox), members of the ADA can monitor their position at any
given moment. What could possibly be more motivating for a weekly league
shooter? Remick’s site is also the only electronic darts venue you’re
going to see emblazoned with the logos of sponsors like Coca-Cola and
Michelob.
Online since 1994, Rick Osgood’s Cyberdarts at www.cyberdarts.com
was created to “promote the sport and further communication between
darters and darts organizations.” One would be hard-pressed to suggest
Osgood has been anything but wildly successful.
This is the original darts site - if not the first, one of the very
first - and is certainly the only one of the handful in existence
a decade ago that is still chugging along strong today. Osgood can fairly
lay claim to having been instrumental in getting more than 75 darts organizations
on-line — including the American Darts Organization (ADO), World
Darts Federation (WDF) and even the ADA’s Remick.
Perhaps the two most popular attractions at Cyberdarts are its online
chat room and e-mail discussion forum, which serve, every day, as essential
gathering places for darters from all over the world to exchange views
and information. Osgood blazed the trail for virtually every other darts-related
site on the Internet today.
At www.dartbase.com, former Austrian national champion (1991), Karlheinz
Zochling, just like Patrick Chaplin, has laid claim to a niche that nobody
else on the Information Highway comes close to matching.Ever since appearing
in 1996, Zochling’s site has been earning kudos for carrying what
is probably the most detailed description of throwing mechanics publicly
available today - but that’s not what sets it apart from all
the others.
Zochling’s focus is on coaching and the importance of the mental
side of the game. His site features a classic article on slumps (“The
First Slump”), a subject I haven’t seen addressed nearly so
well elsewhere. I know for a fact that this single story has influenced
several struggling players to hang in there and stick with the sport.
If only to read this one column, Zochling’s site is worth a visit.
So there you have it, my Top Ten (plus one) places to rip off ideas from
the Web. I pop into each of these sites at least every other day.
Of course, I recognize that this very knowledge might possibly have the
effect of causing many of you who are reading this to steer in the opposite
direction - as far away from these sites as possible. So, to Herkey,
Farmer, Tomlinson, Berlyn and all the rest who have toiled away to create
the excellent sites I have discussed: please accept my apology.
Let me also apologize to the creators of the many other fine web sites
that exist out there. While I do tend to frequent most often the sites
I have mentioned, there are many, many others that I visit regularly.
For example:
World Darts Federation (WDF) at www.dartswdf.com
American Darts Organization (ADO) at www.adodarts.com
Minute Man Dart League at www.mmdl.org
St. Charles Darts League at www.scdl.org
Windy City Darters at www.windycitydarters.org
Tournament Darts International at http://personal.boo.net/~tdi
Tidewater Area Darting Association at www.tidewaterdarts.com
Cape Cod Darts League at www.ccdl.org
Jason Webb’s FANTASTIC “Dartplayer.net”
at http://dartplayer.net
Ville’s Darts Page at http://kotisivu.mtv3.fi/dartsani/me.html
If you have the time to click just once into this list
I highly recommend a stop at the St. Charles Darts League site. Here you
will find a one-of-a-kind column by a mystery woman named Phoebe. I love
Phoebe!
Finally (yes, finally, unless you are interested in my list of the Top
Ten Porn Sites in the WORLD - in which event I kindly ask that you
send your phone number along with several 8” x 10” glossy
photographs and a short video), there are just four more sites that you
should check out. Yes, four. Sorry.
First, there’s www.hooters.com. The fact notwithstanding that the
mention of Hooters helps tie the end of this column back to the beginning,
I refer all members of the male persuasion here for obvious reasons. The
joint has great buffalo wings.
Second, go to www.golden-retriever.com. My dog, Bentley, loves the bitches
here!
Third, you must visit: www.talklikeapirate.com. I suggest this for no
particular reason. “Avast, matey! If ye a sicko, ye might jus get
a kick out of it. Arrrr! Arrrr!”
Finally, finally, FINALLY, if you’re more than just a sicko -
if you’re a certified wack-job like me who loves the sport of darts
and refuse to take life too seriously…
…I invite you to stop by www.dartoidsworld.com. That’s where
I “hang out” when I’m not at Hooters.
From the Field,
Dartoid
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