Paul Lim

Paul Lim
Personal information
Full name Paul Lim Leong Hwa
Nickname The Singapore Slinger
Born 25 January 1954 (1954-01-25) (age 58)
Singapore
Home town San Bernardino, California
United States
Darts information
Playing darts since 1982
Darts DMC Paul Lim
Laterality Right-handed
Walk-on music -
Organisation (see split in darts)
BDO 1981 to 1994
PDC 1994 to present
Current world ranking 186
BDO majors - best performances
World Ch'ship QF 1990
World Masters Last 16, 1981, 1985, 1987, 1988
PDC premier events - best performances
World Ch'ship Last 16, 2001
World Matchplay QF, 1995
World Grand Prix Last 16, 1998
Desert Classic Last 32, 2004
Other tournament wins
Tournament Years
Australian Grand Masters

Singapore Open
Malaysian Open

Asian Cup

1983
5 times
5 times

5 times
Other achievements
First player to achieve nine dart finish at World Championships (1990)
Updated on 19 November 2007.

Paul Lim Leong Hwa[1] known simply as Paul Lim (born 25 January 1954 in Singapore) is a professional darts player who will be best remembered for being the first player to hit a perfect nine-dart finish during the Embassy World Professional Darts Championship in 1990. It remained the only televised nine-dart game to have been achieved in either version of the world championships until 2009, where Raymond van Barneveld hit one against Jelle Klaasen in the quarter-final of the 2009 PDC World Darts Championship.

Lim represented three different countries at darts. Singapore was not affiliated with the sport's governing body, the World Darts Federation (WDF), so Lim played briefly for Papua New Guinea, but settled in California and represented the United States in international competition, before also playing for his native country when they became a WDF playing nation.

He made his World Championship debut in 1982, losing a first round match to Dave Whitcombe. He failed to progress beyond the second round for the next seven years - losing to the likes of Cliff Lazarenko (twice), Bob Anderson, Mike Gregory, and John Lowe (twice). Then in 1990 he hit the headlines and jackpot as he achieved the first World Championship nine-dart finish against Jack McKenna in the second round on January 9. The bonus prize of £52,000 was more than eventual tournament winner Phil Taylor claimed for becoming world champion. It was the only year that Lim managed to reach the quarter-finals of the event, losing again to Lazarenko.

He continued to come up against the biggest names in the game in the world championship: Alan Warriner, John Part (en route to the 1994 title), and Lowe defeated him again in the years after his nine-darter.

Lim decided to switch to darts other organisation, the World Darts Council (now PDC) later in 1994 and made his debut at the 1994 World Matchplay. Lim never enjoyed any success in the PDC - he managed to win only one match in the PDC World Championship, despite appearing in the tournament each year between 1997 and 2002. Although he no longer competes on the darts circuit full-time, Lim still competes at tournaments in his home country. He reached the last 16 of the Las Vegas Open in January 2007. [1]

He won many titles in and around his native country including five Singapore Opens, five Malaysian Opens, and five Asian Cups, but his failure to reach the final stages of the British Darts Organisation and Professional Darts Corporation major tournaments has meant he will be best remembered for his 1990 nine-dart achievement.

Paul Lim is a six-time Medalist (Soft-Tip) Grand Master singles champion. He is arguably the best soft-tip player in the world, even having a dart game programmed with his voice called "out on a Lim".

Outside darts

Lim is a former military policeman and a former chef. He served his National Service in the Singapore army between the ages of 18 to 21. He came to Britain to seek a City and Guilds qualification course in cookery, studying at Battersea and Westminster Colleges in London and undertaking his first role as a chef at the Chelsea Hotel in Knightsbridge. It was whilst he was in Britain studying that he was introduced to the game of darts at the Robin Hood pub near Gunnersbury Station.

He settled in San Bernardino, California and is married to Janet. They have two sons, Christopher and Michael.

Appeared on Bullseye, scoring £198 for charity.

External links and references

  1. ^ Brown, Derek (1981). Guinness Book of Darts. London: Guinness Superlatives Ltd. ISBN 0-851-12229-9.