Jocky Wilson

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Jocky Wilson
Personal information
Full name John Thomas Wilson
Nickname Jocky
Date of birth March 22, 1950 (age 57)
Place of birth Kirkcaldy, Fife, Flag of Scotland
Home town Kirkcaldy, Fife, Flag of Scotland
Organisation
BDO 1979 to 1993
PDC 1993 to 1995
Current World Ranking retired
BDO Grand Slam Events - Best Performances
World Ch'ship Winner 1982, 1989
World Masters Runner-up 1982, 1990
PDC Televised Events - Best Performances
World Ch'ship Group stages 1994, 1995
World Matchplay Quarter Finals 1994
Other Tournament Wins
Tournament Years
British Professional

British Open
Finland Open
WDF Europe Cup Team event
Autumn Gold Masters
BBC2 Bullseye Darts Championship

1981, 1983, 1986, 1988

1982
1986
1978
1984
1980, 1981

Other Achievements
Denmark Open Pairs Winner 1981, 1983, 1984

Infobox last updated on: January 17, 2007.

John Thomas Wilson, (born 22 March 1950) better known as "Jocky" Wilson, is a former Scottish darts champion. He retired from the game in 1995.

Born in Kirkcaldy, Fife, "Jocky" Wilson was twice World professional Darts Champion in 1982 and 1989. A contemporary and rival of Eric Bristow, Bob Anderson and John Lowe, Wilson won many titles in his career including the British Professional Championship a record four times between 1981 and 1988, as well as the prestigious British Open and Matchplay titles.

Contents

[edit] Early life

Wilson had been a coal delivery man and also a miner at Kirkcaldy's Seafield pit. However, it was a spell of unemployment which was to prove the catalyst to Jocky achieving darting greatness. While on the dole, Jocky entered a Butlins darts competition in 1979, which he went on to win, claiming a grand prize of £500.

His success at this tournament convinced him to turn professional as darts was beginning to become popular on television and the World Championship was in its infancy.

[edit] Greatest achievements

His greatest achievements came in the World Championships, first in 1982 where he beat Lowe 5-3 in the final, and then seven years later, when he beat his other great rival Eric Bristow 6-4 in a classic match, where Bristow had recovered from 5-0 down to find himself at 5-4 and 2-2 in the tenth set. This was to be the Scot's last taste of success in a major event although the odd final appearance still came over the next few years.

His record at the World Championship was one of great consistency. From his debut in 1979 until 1991 he managed to reach at least the quarter-finals on every single occasion. He was quarter-finalist eight times (1979, 1980, 1981, 1985, 1986, 1988, 1990, 1991) and three-times a losing semi-finalist (1983, 1984, 1987) in addition to his two World Titles. In 1992 and 1993 he suffered first round defeats for the only time at the Lakeside Country Club.

[edit] Darts split

Wilson joined the other top professionals who split away from the ruling British Darts Organisation in 1993 to form the WDC (now Professional Darts Corporation). He was never able to recapture the form that took him to two world championships. He never won a single match in the PDC World Championship in which he only participated in twice. He lost both group games in 1994 (to Dennis Priestley and Graeme Stoddart) and again in 1995 (to Priestley and John Lowe).

He did reach the final of the WDC Lada Classic in 1993, one of the very early tournaments during the acrimonious split. He lost that final to Mike Gregory. Wilson also reached the quarter-finals of the 1994 World Matchplay, losing to eventual champion Larry Butler.

But his final appearance in a televised tournament came in the 1995 World Matchplay. He beat Rod Harrington 8-4 in the first round, but lost to Nigel Justice in the second round. Wilson never appeared in a major televised event again.

[edit] Outside darts

He was sometimes controversial, occasionally outspoken, but always extremely popular with darts fans who loved his honest approach and natural talent.

In 1982, Wilson was banned from competing in darts tournaments after he allegedly threw a punch at an official during a championship. This was taken as a reaction to Jocky being under intense pressure at the time of the Falklands War, as he was married to an Argentine woman named Malvinas. He was soon allowed back into professional competitions again.

Jocky and Malvinas have two sons, John and William and one daughter Anne Marie.

[edit] After retirement

Wilson never actually announced his retirement from darts, he just faded from the scene following the 1995 World Matchplay.

Jocky had been a heavy drinker and his lifestyle contributed to the onset of diabetes in 1995. For ten years during his darts career he had a house in Wallsend to cut down on travel expenses, but he left that to return to his hown town Kirkcaldy. Within two years, he was declared bankrupt and now survives on disability allowance living in a one-bedroom flat back on the council estate where he grew up.

In 1996, shortly after his retirement he said, "I don't want anyone feeling sorry for me. There's only one person to blame for the situation I'm in, and that's me."

He no longer gives interviews to the press and television. An Observer reporter tried to interview Jocky in January 2007 on the 25th anniversary of his first title win to be told by Jocky's wife Malvinas, "He never has (given an interview) since stopping and never will. He thinks it's all in the past, it's over with."

[edit] Trivia

  • Jocky was one of the first sports people to have a computer game created after him. Published by Zeppelin Games, "Jocky Wilson's Darts Challenge" (1988) and later "Jocky Wilson's Darts Compendium" (1991) were created for several different home computer systems.
  • Wilson was a constant sweet-eater and generally refused to brush his teeth - "my Gran told me the English poison the water" - he had lost his last tooth by the age of 28. Following his 1982 World title win, he paid £1,200 for dentures, but never took to them. They made him belch when drinking, he complained.

[edit] External links

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