English darts player (born 1967)
Darts player
Andy Smith |
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Nickname | "The Pie Man" |
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Born | (1967-06-22) 22 June 1967 (age 57) Bromsgrove, England |
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Home town | Studley, England |
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Playing darts since | 1974 |
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Darts | 20.5g Tungsten A180 |
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Laterality | Right-handed |
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Walk-on music | "Eat It" by "Weird Al" Yankovic |
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BDO | 1997–2004 |
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PDC | 2004–2018 |
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World Ch'ship | Last 32: 1997, 1998, 2000, 2001 |
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World Masters | Last 64: 1999 |
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World Trophy | Last 32: 2002 |
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Int. Darts League | Last 32 group: 2003 |
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World Ch'ship | Last 16: 2006, 2011 |
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World Matchplay | Last 16: 2012 |
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World Grand Prix | Quarter-final: 2006, 2009, 2011 |
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UK Open | Last 16: 2009, 2010, 2011 |
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European Ch'ship | Last 16: 2010 |
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Ch'ship League | Initial groups, Semi-finals 2008 |
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Desert Classic | Last 32: 2005, 2006, 2007 |
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US Open/WSoD | Last 32: 2007, 2008 |
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PC Finals | Quarter-final: 2011 |
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England Open | 1997 | Norway Open | 2002 | Redditch Open | 2009 | Welsh Open | 1999 |
Players Championships
Players Championship (BAR) | 2011 | Players Championship (GER) | 2009 | Players Championship (HOL) | 2010 | Players Championship (SCO) | 2007 |
UK Open Regionals
Regional Final (SCO) | 2004 | Regional Final (SWE) | 2005 |
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2009 Nine dart finish at PDPA Players Championship Germany. |
Andrew Smith (born 22 June 1967) is an English former professional darts player. He used the nickname The Pie Man[1] for his matches. His best performances came in the "floor" events (non-televised tournaments with many boards being used simultaneously), where he won six PDC Pro Tour titles.
Career
A former England international, Smith won the England, Welsh and Norway Opens in his early career, as well as qualifying for the British Darts Organisation version of the world championship on four occasions (losing in the first round each time), before switching from the BDO to the PDC. His wins in the Scottish and South-West Regional Finals for the 2005 UK Open saw him enter the televised finals as number one seed, and he later qualified for the Las Vegas Desert Classic.
Smith narrowly missed out on an automatic place in the 2006 PDC World Championship after jumping to 33rd in the rankings, but came through the PDPA qualifiers to book his place at the Circus Tavern. He overcame Colin Monk and Ray Carver to reach the last 16, before losing out to Alan Warriner-Little.
Smith did not win another Pro Tour title until October 2007, when he took the PDPA Scottish Players Championship in Irvine – beating James Wade with a 108 average in the final. He won a Players Championship in Dinslaken, Germany in June 2009, hitting a nine-dart finish in his quarter final before defeating Colin Lloyd to take the title.[2]
Smith suffered three successive first round defeats in the PDC World Championship, losing to Mensur Suljović in 2008, Tony Ayres in 2009, and Darin Young in 2010. He broke this trend in the 2011 PDC World Darts Championship when he beat Shane Tichowitsch 3–1, and reached the last-16 for the second time in his career with a 4–3 win over Mervyn King, which included Smith hitting seven 100+ out-shots.
In June, Smith won the Bobby Bourn Memorial Players Championship beating Dave Chisnall 6–2 earning himself £6000. On his way to the final he narrowly beat Wayne Atwood 6–5 before he beat James Richardson also 6–5. He then picked up his form to beat Alan Tabern 6–3 which meant he faced Andy Hamilton 6–2. in the quarter-finals he beat Gary Anderson 6–1 setting up a semi-final clash with the in-form James Wade whom he beat 6–3 before prevailing in the final against Dave Chisnall hitting two 12 darters and two thirteen darters to seal the win.
At the 2012 World Championship Smith played Scott Rand in the first round and was beaten 0–3, without winning a leg.[3] At the UK Open, Smith beat Rand 9–6 and came back from 4–8 down in the last 32 to force a decider against Dennis Priestley which he lost.[4] In July, Smith won his first ever match in seven attempts at the World Matchplay following a 10–6 victory over Paul Nicholson.[5] He faced Adrian Lewis in the last 16 and was beaten 7–13.[6] After all 33 ProTour events of 2012 had been played, Smith was 19th on the Order of Merit, comfortably inside the top 32 who qualified for the Players Championship Finals.[7] He was beaten 2–6 by Andy Hamilton in the first round.[8]
Smith lost in the first round of the 2013 World Championship to qualifier Daryl Gurney 3–1, hitting just 15% of his darts at a double during the match.[9] He beat James Hubbard 5–3 in the second round of the UK Open, before losing 9–7 to Gary Anderson.[10] Smith's deepest run of the year was at the fourth Players Championship where he lost 6–4 to Jelle Klaasen in the semi-finals.[11]
Smith overcame Steve Brown 3–1 in the opening round of the 2014 World Championship but then let a 3–0 set lead slip against James Wade in the second round to lose 4–3, missing two darts for the match in the process.[12] He suffered a heavy 9–3 loss to Gary Anderson in the third round of the UK Open.[13] Smith defeated Kevin Dowling 6–3 and Anderson and Ronnie Baxter both 6–2 at the Austrian Darts Open to play in his sole quarter-final of 2014.[14] He lost to home favourite Mensur Suljović 6–2.[15] He was knocked out of the World Matchplay and World Grand Prix by Wade.[16] At the Players Championship Finals, Smith beat Michael Smith 6–4, before Adrian Lewis won 10–3 in the second round.[17]
Smith lost the first two sets of his first round match against Ronny Huybrechts at the 2015 World Championship without winning a leg. He went two nil up in legs in the next set but missed a total of five darts for it to be beaten 3–0.[18] He was unable to get past the last 16 of any event in 2015 and dropped out of the top 32 on the Order of Merit during the year, which meant he failed to qualify for the World Championship for the first time since the 2005 event.[19][20] He lost 6–5 in the first round of the 2016 UK Open to Jermaine Wattimena.[21] Throughout 2016 he failed to progress beyond the last 32 of a single tournament.[22] He was the world number 74 after the 2017 World Championship and entered Q School to try and win his place on the tour back.[23][24] One last 64 finish during the four days of play was not enough to do so, and Smith only had a limited selection of events to enter in 2017.[25]
World Championship results
BDO
- 1997: First round (lost to Geoff Wylie 2–3)
- 1998: First round (lost to Les Wallace 2–3)
- 2000: First round (lost to Co Stompé 2–3)
- 2001: First round (lost to Co Stompé 1–3)
PDC
Career statistics
Key
W
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F
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SF
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QF
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#R
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RR
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Prel.
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DNQ
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DNP
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NH
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(W) Won; (F) finalist; (SF) semifinalist; (QF) quarterfinalist; (#R) rounds 6, 5, 4, 3, 2, 1; (RR) round-robin stage; (Prel.) Preliminary round; (DNQ) Did not qualify; (DNP) Did not participate; (NH) Not held
References
External links