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| All in the name of darts The Count receives messages from Transylvania Do you know your Vikings from your Counts? BBC Sport Online looks at the nicknames for the Embassy World Darts Championship contenders. Can The Count come back, and will The Viking slay John 'Boy'? That is what darts fans will be asking themselves at Frimley Green, because it seems you have not arrived on the oche until you have acquired a nickname. Whatever you think of the suitability of giving darts players nicknames, some of them certainly deserve a prize for originality.
This tag only starts to make sense when you see him and realise he is the spitting image of a Hammer House Of Horror Dracula - a younger version of snooker's Ray Reardon. The 2000 champion suffered an upset last year when he lost in the final to John 'Boy' Walton, named after the popular 1970s TV show. Walton faces a tricky first round encounter against four-time semi-finalist Andy 'The Viking' Fordham, whose nickname may have a lot to do with his big gruff exterior. Thin-as-a-rake One classically monikered player that is absent from this year's tournament is The Bronze Adonis - Steve Beaton. The man, who has single-handedly tried to keep footballers' favourite 1980s haircut - the mullet - in fashion long past its sell-by date, won the title in 1996. But he is first to admit that the nickname has a lot to do with his appearance relative to the more typical portly figure seen in action, and it does not really fit, glamour-wise, with his day job as a driving instructor. The Prince of Dartness, otherwise known as Chris Mason, is another big name absent from this year's proceedings at Frimley Green. Dutchman Co Stompe will be in action at the Lakeside though, and not surprisingly his nickname Pencil might have something to do with his thin-as-a-rake appearance. Then we have the predictable, including Raymond 'Barney' Barneveld, the two-time champion from Holland and Mervyn 'Merv the Swerve' King. Limestone Cowboy They are at least not as bad as the groan-inducingly awful, which must be topped by kilt-wearing 1997 champion Les Wallace, transformed into McDanger, while Richie Burnett was the Prince of Wales. It wasn't much better in the past - everyone knows Eric Bristow was the Crafty Cockney, but check out Phil 'The Power' Taylor, Dennis 'The Menace' Priestley (both now defected to Sky), Rod 'Prince of Style' Harrington and, most bizarrely, Bob 'Limestone Cowboy' Anderson - perhaps a reference to his vaguely country-and-western get-up and his roots. Whatever you think of the tags, it all adds to the fun, and don't forget it's difficult to win without a nickname. | Internet links: The BBC is not responsible for the content of external internet sites Top World Darts Championship 2002 stories now: Links to more World Darts Championship 2002 stories are at the foot of the page. | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
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