KingMervtheFirst wrote:Wasn't there a bit of an avalanche of defections just after the 2001 Lakeshite? Think it included Beaton, Andy Jenkins, Baxter, Mason and a couple of others.
Yes, it was in late 2001. They were called the Skol Six. It saw Steve Beaton, Ronnie Baxter, Chris Mason, Kevin Painter, Andy Jenkins and Paul Williams switch to playing in the PDC World Championship. Peter Manley also rejected BDO attempts to get him back over there. Manley had an awful 2001 on the TV, with rival players calling him "One Round Manley".
KingMervtheFirst wrote:Also worth noting that Taylor was rarely number one in the rankings prior to the introduction of the OoM, presumably due to not participating in a lot of floor events.
True, Taylor didn't play the number of floor events that the likes of Harrington, Warriner, Manley and Lloyd thrived on at that time. When Taylor lost to Manley in the semi finals of the 1999 World Matchplay, Taylor felt it was partly because of Manley being more match sharp in competitive darts.
Justin Credible wrote:colin lloyd was #1, down most to raking criteria on event played as opposed to present system of pounds earned equals points
Correct. The Order of Merit based on prize money began after the 2007 PDC World Championship.
Rogg wrote:KingMervtheFirst wrote:Wasn't there a bit of an avalanche of defections just after the 2001 Lakeshite? Think it included Beaton, Andy Jenkins, Baxter, Mason and a couple of others.
At the 2002 PDC World Championship: Kevin Painter, Steve Beaton, Ronnie Baxter, Paul Williams, Andy Jenkins and Chris Mason all played in their first PDC World Championship.
Switched, in other words.
Five of them had all played at Lakeshite the previous year (2001). Williams had last played Lakeshite in 2000.
As for why they all switched at the same, I don't know, but it was a pretty significant shift.
They all switched because Barry Hearn became chairman of the PDC around the summer of 2001 and he told players who still played at the Embassy at Lakeside that if they wished to continue playing in PDC televised events from 2002 onwards then they would have to play at the PDC World Championship at the Circus Tavern. The result was the Skol Six switching (Skol was the sponsor of the PDC World Championship at the time), while Martin Adams refused to switch and had nothing to do with the PDC for 14 years afterwards.