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All BDO World Champions 1978–2020: Men’s and Women’s Results

The complete list of every BDO World Darts Championship winner from 1978 to 2020 — men’s and women’s — with finalists, scores, and notes on the moments that actually mattered.

Graham Priestley 3 December 2025 5 min read 1,094 words
BDO World Darts Championship trophy — won by champions from 1978 to 2020

Every BDO World Darts Championship winner, every finalist, every score. From Leighton Rees lifting the inaugural trophy in 1978 to Wayne Warren’s win in the final edition at Lakeside in January 2020. No filler — just the complete record, with notes on the moments that deserve more than a row in a table.

A few entries here other sites get wrong, or list without context. That bothers me. These results are the history of the sport for a generation of fans — they deserve to be accurate.

Men’s BDO World Champions 1978–2020

Forty-three editions. Seventeen different champions. The tournament ran at the Lakeside Country Club in Frimley Green from 1986 onwards — but started at the Heart of the Midlands Club in Nottingham for its first eight years. The full record:

Year Champion Country Finalist Score Note
1978 Leighton Rees Wales John Lowe 11–7 (legs) First ever champion. Legs format used in year one only.
1979 John Lowe England Leighton Rees 5–0
1980 Eric Bristow England Bobby George 5–3 Bristow’s first title. He was 22.
1981 Eric Bristow England John Lowe 5–3
1982 Jocky Wilson Scotland John Lowe 5–3
1983 Keith Deller England Eric Bristow 6–5 500/1 outsider. Deller was 23 and virtually unknown. Arguably the biggest upset in the tournament’s history.
1984 Eric Bristow England Dave Whitcombe 7–1
1985 Eric Bristow England John Lowe 6–2
1986 Eric Bristow England Dave Whitcombe 6–0 Fifth and final world title. First edition at Lakeside.
1987 John Lowe England Eric Bristow 6–4
1988 Bob Anderson England John Lowe 6–4
1989 Jocky Wilson Scotland Eric Bristow 6–4 Bristow knew his game was going. Wilson was brilliant that week.
1990 Phil Taylor England Eric Bristow 6–1 Taylor’s first world title. His last under the BDO banner before the PDC split.
1991 Dennis Priestley England Eric Bristow 6–0
1992 Phil Taylor England Mike Gregory 6–5 A tight final. Taylor and Gregory both members of what would become the WDC breakaway group the following year.
1993 John Lowe England Alan Warriner 6–3 Lowe’s third title. His last at Lakeside.
1994 John Part Canada Bobby George 6–0 First non-British, non-Welsh, non-Scottish champion.
1995 Richie Burnett Wales Raymond van Barneveld 6–3
1996 Steve Beaton England Richie Burnett 6–3
1997 Les Wallace Scotland Marshall James 6–3
1998 Raymond van Barneveld Netherlands Richie Burnett 6–5 Barneveld’s first title. The Dutch crowd had started making their presence felt at Frimley Green.
1999 Raymond van Barneveld Netherlands Ronnie Baxter 6–5
2000 Ted Hankey England Ronnie Baxter 6–0 Dominant final. Hankey’s first of two world titles.
2001 John Walton England Ted Hankey 6–2
2002 Tony David Australia Mervyn King 6–4 First Australian world champion.
2003 Raymond van Barneveld Netherlands Ritchie Davies 6–3 Third title for Barneveld.
2004 Andy Fordham England Mervyn King 6–3
2005 Raymond van Barneveld Netherlands Martin Adams 6–2 Barneveld’s fourth and final BDO title. He joined the PDC the following year.
2006 Jelle Klaasen Netherlands Raymond van Barneveld 7–5 Klaasen was 21. Youngest BDO world champion on record. He beat the defending champion in the final.
2007 Martin Adams England Phill Nixon 7–6 Adams’ first title. Long time coming.
2008 Mark Webster Wales Simon Whitlock 7–5
2009 Ted Hankey England Tony O’Shea 7–6 Hankey’s second title, nine years after the first.
2010 Martin Adams England Dave Chisnall 7–5
2011 Martin Adams England Dean Winstanley 7–5 Adams’ third consecutive title. Three in a row — only Bristow had done that before.
2012 Christian Kist Netherlands Tony O’Shea 7–5
2013 Scott Waites England Tony O’Shea 7–1
2014 Stephen Bunting England Alan Norris 7–4
2015 Scott Mitchell England Martin Adams 7–6 Tight final. Mitchell held his nerve.
2016 Scott Waites England Jeff Smith 7–1 Waites’ second title.
2017 Glen Durrant England Danny Noppert 7–3 Durrant’s first title. Middlesbrough’s finest hour at Frimley Green.
2018 Glen Durrant England Mark McGeeney 7–6 Second title. McGeeney pushed him all the way.
2019 Glen Durrant England Scott Waites 7–3 Third consecutive title. Durrant joins a very short list.
2020 Wayne Warren Wales Jim Williams 7–4 The last BDO World Champion. Warren was 57. The BDO entered administration later that year.

A note on 2015: I see this listed incorrectly as Scott Waites on several sites. It was Scott Mitchell — Waites won his second title in 2016. Small detail, but it matters if you’re keeping a proper record.

Women’s BDO World Champions 2001–2020

The Women’s World Championship began in 2001. Trina Gulliver won it. And then she won it again. Seven times in the first nine editions — a period of dominance that has no real equivalent in the men’s game.

Year Champion Country Finalist Score
2001 Trina Gulliver England Mandy Solomons 2–1
2002 Trina Gulliver England Francis Hoenselaar 2–1
2003 Trina Gulliver England Anne Kirk 2–0
2004 Trina Gulliver England Francis Hoenselaar 2–0
2005 Trina Gulliver England Francis Hoenselaar 2–0
2006 Trina Gulliver England Francis Hoenselaar 2–0
2007 Trina Gulliver England Francis Hoenselaar 2–1
2008 Anastasia Dobromyslova Russia Trina Gulliver 2–0
2009 Francis Hoenselaar Netherlands Trina Gulliver 2–1
2010 Trina Gulliver England Rhian Edwards 2–0
2011 Trina Gulliver England Rhian Edwards 2–0
2012 Anastasia Dobromyslova Russia Deta Hedman 2–1
2013 Anastasia Dobromyslova Russia Lisa Ashton 2–1
2014 Lisa Ashton England Deta Hedman 3–2
2015 Lisa Ashton England Fallon Sherrock 3–1
2016 Trina Gulliver England Deta Hedman 3–2
2017 Lisa Ashton England Corrine Hammond 3–0
2018 Lisa Ashton England Anastasia Dobromyslova 3–1
2019 Mikuru Suzuki Japan Lorraine Winstanley 3–0
2020 Mikuru Suzuki Japan Lisa Ashton 3–0

Hoenselaar reached five consecutive women’s finals from 2002 to 2007 and lost all five. She finally won in 2009 — beating Gulliver, who’d beaten her so many times. That 2009 win deserves more recognition than it gets.

Dobromyslova in 2008 was the first non-British, non-Dutch women’s champion. She did it three times in total — 2008, 2012, 2013. Suzuki’s back-to-back titles in 2019 and 2020 were the final chapter: the first Asian champion in the event’s history.

BDO World Championship title counts — men and women, 1978–2020
BDO World Championship title counts — men and women, 1978–2020

Records and Milestones

Men’s Records

Most titles — Men’s: Eric Bristow, 5 (1980, 1981, 1984, 1985, 1986). Three were at Lakeside. He won his last at 28. After that, the focal dystonia that affected his throwing arm effectively ended him as a serious contender, though it took years to accept it.

Three consecutive titles: Bristow won three in a row (1984–1986). Martin Adams matched it exactly (2009–2011). Glen Durrant then did it again (2017–2019). Three men, three eras.

Multiple title winners: Bristow 5, van Barneveld 4, Lowe 3, Adams 3, Durrant 3, Wilson 2, Taylor 2, Hankey 2, Waites 2.

Youngest men’s champion: Jelle Klaasen in 2006, aged 21. He beat the man who’d won it four times in the final. Remarkable result.

Oldest men’s champion: Wayne Warren in 2020, aged 57. The oldest world champion in the tournament’s history and, as it turned out, the last.

First non-British champion (men’s): John Part, Canada, 1994.

Women’s Records

Most titles — Women’s: Trina Gulliver, 10 (2001–2007, 2010, 2011, 2016). No player in either the men’s or women’s game comes close to that proportion of titles won from editions entered.

Most finals reached (women’s): Francis Hoenselaar, who reached the final six times — and won once, in 2009.

Lisa Ashton’s four titles (2014, 2015, 2017, 2018) are often underrated. She’s the second most successful women’s champion, and she did it across two separate spells.

First non-British women’s champion: Anastasia Dobromyslova, Russia, 2008 — breaking a seven-year English monopoly on the title.

First Asian champion (women’s): Mikuru Suzuki, Japan, 2019.

Graham Priestley
Written by
Graham Priestley

Graham has covered the BDO darts circuit since the late 1980s. He attended more than 20 consecutive World Championships at Lakeside. Based in Camberley, Surrey.