'I rejected big money during darts breakaway – I'm still not sure if I made the right call' - The Mirror

'I rejected big money during darts breakaway – I'm still not sure if I made the right call' - The Mirror

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'I rejected big money during darts breakaway – I'm still not sure if I made the right call'Darts legend John Lowe looks back on his pivotal role in the acrimonious 'split' which ripped the


game in half in the 1990s, paving the way to its present-day successCommentsSportMark Whiley Sports Reporter05:30, 09 Feb 2025Three-time BDO world champion John Lowe was at the centre of the


sport's 'split'(Image: Christopher Lee/Getty Images) More than 30 years on, John Lowe still wonders if he made the right decision.


In the early 1990s, darts was at a crossroads that would define its entire future. Restless at the sport’s dwindling TV exposure, the best players in the game, including Lowe, Phil Taylor


and Eric Bristow, broke away from the BDO to form the World Darts Council (WDC), which later became the Professional Darts Corporation (PDC).


‌ The ‘split’, as it would become known, proved to be the best thing to happen to darts. But it wasn’t a simple decision for those involved at the time. Stick with the BDO and its guaranteed


tobacco sponsorship income or gamble on a new entity?


‌ There were ructions, rows and U-turns. The WDC almost fell apart before its first World Championship in 1994. And it may have done had three-time world champion Lowe not decided to stick


with it.


READ MORE: 'My historic nine-dart finish cost Eric Bristow £50k – but he still bought me a drink'READ MORE: Barry Hearn called out by darts legend over PDC World Championship 'publicity


stunt' ‘Old Stoneface’ won the final BDO World Championship at the Lakeside prior to the split in 1993. The WDC was already up and running, but Lowe and his fellow defectors were being


pressured into returning to the BDO.


“I was the last world champion and never defended it,” recalls Lowe, who appears in the Sky documentary series Darts Kings. "It runs a bit deeper than that because Embassy, who sponsored the


World Championship, asked me to go back to the BDO before this new division started and they offered me a substantial amount of money.


Article continues below “At that time, I was involved in the Professional Darts Association. I was unpaid secretary for about 12 years. And when a company like Embassy offers you £20,000


[more than £50,000 in today’s money] to stay… If I had gone back, Sky TV would not have shown the first World Championship.


“We’d already had two players pull out and Sky said, ‘if one more of you pulls out, we’ll pull the plug’. So I said, ‘no, we’ve got to stay together and push this along’.


GET INVOLVED! Who was your favourite darts player in the 80s and 90s? Tell us in the comments section.


‌John Lowe with great rival and friend Eric Bristow(Image: LUSTIG PHOTOGRAPHY 02085294967) “All these years later, should I have stayed and taken the money? I look back sometimes and think,


‘should I have taken it?’ I still can’t make my mind up whether I made the right decision. It was for the sport of darts because of what it is now. But should I have just looked after John


Lowe?”


The early years after the breakaway were tough, with players not even getting paid initially. Lowe says: “They [the WDC] were in desperate need of money.


‌ “At that first World Championship, no one got paid for quite a while. I don’t think Phil Taylor and Dennis Priestley [the finalists that year] got paid for about two years.


“They got paid in shares in the new company. Then it nearly collapsed, and without Barry Hearn and Matchroom coming in, it would have gone.”


While most of the players involved were taking a big risk, Lowe didn’t see it that way. He explains: “The others were taking more of a risk than me. I was a joiner and when I started playing


darts professionally, I still had it in the back of my mind that I could go back to that and set up a nice little business.


‌Phil Taylor was one of the players to defected to the WDC (now the PDC)(Image: Getty Images) “Back when I first started playing, I thought it was a pub game, not a sport whatsoever. It was


something people did after a day at work.


“You played in local leagues and if you were successful at the end of the season, you may have won an alarm clock or something like that. There was no money in it. But then, when money came


in, it changed from being a pub game to a serious sport.


‌ “I always thought the [WDC] bubble would burst. I didn’t think it would be going for more than 10 years. Now it’s been more than 30 years and is established for the next 25-30 years.”


With that in mind, today’s players, many of whom are earning hundreds of thousands of pounds per year, owe a debt of gratitude to the likes of Lowe, not that he expects any thanks.


“Let’s say I’d been a tennis player, would my son remember Bjorn Borg," he asks. “Time moves on and it has to move on. So I’m not looking for any thank yous from anybody. I’m quite happy


with the way life has treated me and how darts has treated me.”


Article continues below Watch Dart Kings on Sky Documentaries and NOW.