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Barneveld looks to the heavens
after his wonderful win
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By Tom Fordyce
BBC Sport Online
To the list of Dutch sporting heroes like Fanny Blankers-Koen, Johan
Cruyff and Pieter van den Hoogenband can be added a new name. |
Barney goes bananas as the title
is sealed
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Raymond Barneveld might
not have the flat stomach or chiseled cheekbones of his illustrious
predecessors, but after his third Embassy World Darts title no one
in Holland is complaining.
Barneveld's homeland has gone darts-crazy.
With football in its midwinter break, the nation's sporting focus
has been on events at the Lakeside Country Club in Frimley Green.
It is estimated that a quarter of the entire Dutch population watched
Barneveld's 6-3 triumph over Ritchie Davies on Sunday night. |
And just as the success of Cruyff's generation of Total Footballers
in the 1970s inspired a new crop of Dutch youngsters and led to
the European Championship win of 1988, so Barneveld's achievements
promise to take darts to new heights.
Barneveld was working as a postman when he won his first Embassy
crown back in 1998.
That win sparked off huge interest in the game in Holland, made
him a national hero and allowed him to hang up his postal sack and
turn pro.
A Dutch television audience of four million watched his second title
win, in 1999, - and even more tuned in this weekend.
"Since that time, darts has become more and more popular in
Holland, " Barneveld told the BBC in the wake of his hat-trick
win.
"I spoke to my manager and he said it would be mad when we
get home.
The football season in Holland is in its winter break, so people
are watching darts instead.
"In a normal tournament like the Open Amsterdam there used
to be between 300 to 400 entrants - but now there are about 1,000
for a ranking tournament." |
Barneveld is so popular in his native country that he is unable
to walk the streets of his hometown, The Hague, without being mobbed.
Frimley Green was over-run by his supporters, decked out in orange
T-shirts and waving orange flags.
Even British darts fans joined in the celebrations, while England's
former world champion Ted "The Count" Hankey could be
seen wandering around in a Holland scarf after his first-round loss.
Breaking of A New Dawn
Barneveld's victory has deeper significance for the world of
darts.
When taken together with Canadian John Part's win at the PDC World
Championships earlier this month, it represents a new, cosmopolitan
chapter in the history of the great game.
For the first time in many years, neither world title is held by
a player from the British Isles.
The explosion of interest in darts in Holland leads many critics
to predict a new orange invasion of British darts over the next
few years.
With Barneveld's compatriot Mieke de Boer the brightest young talent
in the women's game, that invasion may already be well underway.
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Dutch fans at Lakeside celebrate
Barneveld's win
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