Tony David

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Tony David
Personal information
Nickname The Deadly Boomerang
Date of birth September 11, 1967
Place of birth Townsville, Queensland, Australia
Home town , Australia
Darts information
Playing darts since 1993
Darts 21.7g Datadart Tony David
Organisation
BDO 1999
Current World Ranking 51 (WDF, November 2006)
BDO Grand Slam Events - Best Performances
World Ch'ship Winner 2002
World Masters Semi finalist 2004
World Darts Trophy Winner 2002
Other Tournament Wins
Tournament Years
Doeland Grand Masters

Pacific Masters
French Open
Coronation Open
Queensland Zone 7 Open
Coolbellup Open

2002

2003
2003
2003
2003
2004

Tony David (born September 11, 1967 in Townsville, Queensland) [1] is a darts player and is the only Australian player to have been world champion. David won the 2002 Embassy World Championship, one version of darts world titles. He plays with the nickname, The Deadly Boomerang

He started playing darts at the age of 25 and progressed into the Queensland State team in 1995. Four years later, he made the Australian WDF World Cup team for the first time.

He made his first trip to the Lakeside Country Club in 2001 to play in the Embassy World Championship, losing to Andy Fordham 0-3 in the first round. In only his second attempt at the World Championship he went all the way to the title beating Ritchie Davies, Marko Pusa, Bob Taylor and a tight semi-final against Martin Adams 5-4. He then beat Mervyn King 6-4 in the final to become the first Australian player to win the title.

Later in 2002, he won the World Darts Trophy (WDT) in the Netherlands, one of the British Darts Organisation's other Grand Slam titles. He also reached the semi-finals of the WDT in 2003 and 2004 losing both times to Raymond van Barneveld.

The defence of his world title in 2003 started creditably, but ended with a heavy loss 0-5 at the quarter-final stages to Welshman, Ritchie Davies. After that defeat, David has failed to win another match at the Lakeside event. He went out in the first round in 2004 to Darryl Fitton and in 2005 to Tony Eccles.

Since then, David's form has dipped dramatically and he has failed to qualify for the 2006 and 2007 World Championships. His world ranking has also continued to fall, he is now outside the WDF's top 50 players.

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