by Bobby George (Author)
When Bobby George first appeared on the darts scene, he immediately caught the eye: well built (he was the only darts player ever to be approached to take part in TV's Superstars), good looking and with plenty of bling, he was a natural showman. He could play a bit too, as he showed by reaching the final of the world championship in 1980 and 1994. Now best known as a commentator on the BBC, George relives the excitement of the last thirty years of the world of darts, with plenty of insider gossip and stories about all the most famous players in the TV era of the sport. But that is only the beginning of his story. Before the darts came his time as a doorman at various East End pubs and bars just after the era of the Krays and Richardsons, when baseball bats and knuckle dusters would often come in handy. He also helped build the Victoria line. Since he retired from full-time darts, he has appeared in gangster films, such as Dog, videos with The Streets, and even on Celebrity Fit Club. This book is more than a darts story, it is a tale of a charismatic and tough showman, who has gone from childhood poverty to building his own eighteen-bedroom mansion, and picked up a wonderful fund of great stories along the way.
Format: Hardcover
Pages: 288
Edition: First Edition, Second Printing
Publisher: Orion
Published: 27 Dec 2006
ISBN 10: 0752885553
ISBN 13: 9780752885551
Book Overview: Published to coincide with the PDC and BDO world darts championships Bobby George is a hugely popular cult figure on the darts circuit, and his work as a commentator for BBC2 was seen by over 4 million people in 2006, up 14% on the year before Great stories from the golden era of Eric Bristow, Jocky Wilson and John Lowe, when darts drew audiences of up to 10 million The only other major darts autobiography in recent years, by Phil Taylor, sold almost 20,000 copies Echoes of The Guvnor in Bobby's tales of his life as a bouncer in the East End of the 1960s