Monday, November 17, 2025

Back to Basics: Tonight’s Darts Routine

 I’m going right back to basics tonight.

For months now my darts have been going into the board at a slight angle to the right, and I’ve never properly taken the time to figure out why. So tonight is all about slowing things down and looking at the fundamentals, ie stance, balance, throw and follow-through.

I’m going to start by videoing a few throws from different angles.
It’s something I’ve never actually done, but a lot of players say it helps you spot tiny things you don’t notice in real time, such as shoulder position, foot placement, arm path, release point, all the little habits that creep in.

Once I’ve had a look at the footage, I’m going to move onto my Target practice game, which focuses on four main scoring/finishing areas. The plan is simple:

  • Identify anything in the throw that feels 'off'

  • Make one small correction at a time

  • Repeat it until the muscle memory starts to settle

  • Use the Target game to reinforce the cleaner throw

Nothing fancy, nothing overcomplicated, just pure basics and consistency.

I’ll report back with how it goes and whether the adjustments make any difference. Even a small improvement in dart angle would be a big win

Red Dragon Darts Review 2025 – Are They Still the Best Value in Darts?

For years now, Red Dragon have been one of the most trusted names in darts. From big TV players to club throwers trying to improve their averages, their gear shows up everywhere  and for good reason.

As someone based in Bristol, it’s great having a top darts manufacturer practically on my doorstep. Red Dragon have always felt like a local neighbour in the darts world.

With Beau Greaves, Gerwyn Price, Peter Wright, Jonny Clayton and dozens of emerging tour players throwing their equipment, you can’t really ignore them.

But the big question is:

Are Red Dragon still the best value brand in 2025?

I’ve taken a deeper look based on my own experience, other players I know, and what people are actually using in leagues and open tournaments.

Why Red Dragon Stand Out

Red Dragon have built a strong reputation for three simple reasons:

1. Quality without the premium price tag

Their machining is consistently good, even on their lower-budget darts.

The Amberjacks, for example, punch well above their price bracket.

2. Something for every grip and playing style

Light, heavy, front-loaded, scalloped, smooth, aggressive grip, they cover everything.

3. Constant innovation

New grips, new coatings, new bbarres, they always have something fresh.

That keeps them relevant in a competitive market.

My Honest Thoughts on Their Ranges

Amberjacks – Best for Improvers and Budget Players

Under £30, durable, clean grip, and surprisingly consistent.

I genuinely think they’re the best “next step” for anyone moving up from their first set of darts.


Gerwyn Price Blue Ice / Ice Series – Mid-Range Quality

A great option if you want a professional-style barrel without spending £80+.

Nice grip that isn’t too harsh and a shape that suits a lot of everyday players.


Peter Wright Signature Range – Unique but Worth Trying


Expensive, yes,but the machining is on another level.

These are for players who want something special and don’t mind standing out on the oche!


Razor Edge – For Players Who Love Grip

If you like a sharp, aggressive grip that doesn’t slip, Razor Edge are perfect.


Flights, Stems & Accessories


Red Dragon’s flights last longer than most.

Their stems are dependable, and the cases are well-built.


I’ve never had a bad accessory from them.


Are They Good for the Average Club Player?


Yes, this is where they’re strongest.

You don’t need a tour card to appreciate well-made barrels.

Most club players want:

A comfortable grip

Steady balance

A bit of confidence when they’re having a bad leg


And Red Dragon deliver exactly that, especially in the mid-range price bracket.


Where Red Dragon Offer the Best Value


If you want great darts without spending the earth:

Amberjack Series

Blue Ice Series

Razor Edge

Jonny Clayton Originals

Gerwyn Price Originals


These ranges consistently offer the best mix of price and quality for improving players.


Final Thoughts


Red Dragon remain one of the best-value manufacturers in 2025.

Whether you throw a 55 average or an 85 average, there will be a barrel that suits you without costing a fortune.

And with so many pros trusting them on the big stage, you know you’re getting equipment that’s been tested under pressure.


If you enjoy trying new setups or simply want a reliable upgrade, Red Dragon should definitely be on your list.

Support the Blog ❤️ (Affiliate)


If you’d like to check out the full Red Dragon range, you can use the banner on the right-hand side of my site — or the link can be flind here: Red Dragon Darts

It really helps support the blog and keeps these posts coming.

Sunday, November 16, 2025

What Is the Real Standard of the PDC Pro Tour? And Who Else Might Be Good Enough?

 This whole idea started with a simple question:

If Beau Greaves can now play on the PDC Pro Tour… could any other player ,men or women, realistically maintain the level needed to survive there?

But once I started digging, the question became a lot bigger.

What about the Challenge Tour?
What about the Asian Tour, CDC (North America), DPNZ, Australia, South America?
How many players outside the main PDC system actually throw at a standard high enough to belong on the Pro Tour?

The truth is we only ever see the very top names from these regions on TV. Beneath them could be dozens of players who never get the chance due to:

  • financial pressure

  • travel costs

  • lack of sponsorship

  • work and family commitments

  • or living thousands of miles from European darts

For non-Europeans, especially African or South American players, playing a full Pro Tour season is almost impossible without significant backing.

So,ignoring money, ignoring travel, ignoring logistics and looking only at ability, what standard does a player need to survive on the PDC Pro Tour for two years?


Looking at the Pro Tour Standard (Players Championship Events)

I analysed the median averages from Players Championship events over the last three seasons.

Why median? Because:

  • mean averages get skewed by a handful of very low or very high outliers

  • median gives a clearer 'middle of the pack' picture

  • on a tour with 128 players, it’s the fairest gauge of what 'survival level' actually looks like

Here’s the median for each year:

  • 2025: 90.21

  • 2024: 90.30

  • 2023: 90.71

Take the mean of those medians and you get:

📌 A rough Pro Tour benchmark of ≈ 90.4 average

This doesn’t mean averages = everything. But for scoring consistency across a season, it’s the best indicator we have.

To “be Tour standard”, a player should realistically be able to hold 90+ in floor events over long periods, not just occasionally.


🌍 So… who outside the Pro Tour actually hits this level?

Using 2025 data from each major PDC-affiliated tour:

(❗Note: Beau Greaves is excluded because she’s the benchmark we’re comparing against.)


PDC Challenge Tour (2025)

  • Beau Greaves — 91.5 (only player above the benchmark)

  • Daniel Ayres — 90.3 (just below)

Only 1 qualifier


PDC Women’s Series (2025)

  • Top: Noa-Lynn van Leuven — 81.1

No qualifiers


PDC Asian Tour (2025)

  • Top: Seigo Asada — 87.7

No qualifiers


DPNZ (New Zealand)

  • Top: Jonny Tata — 86.01

No qualifiers


Australian Tour (2025)

  • Top: Brody Klinge — 86.5

No qualifiers


CDC – North America (2025)

  • Top: David Cameron — 85.1

No qualifiers


South American Tour (2025)

  • Top: Jesús Salate — 82.6

No qualifiers


🧠 What surprised me most…

I expected at least a handful of Challenge Tour players to be above 90.
I expected the Asian Tour to have several around 92–94.
I thought North America might have one or two in the 90s as well.

But they didn't appear:

Only one player outside the Pro Tour averaged over 90+ in 2025: Beau Greaves.

This doesn’t mean the others aren’t capable.
Some could easily raise their game on the Pro Tour.
Some may never get the financial chance to try.

But as things stand, real Tour-ready consistency is rare.


Final Thoughts: Who Is Truly 'Tour Ready'?

This analysis isn’t about predicting potential, it’s about identifying the level needed to survive the grind of the Pro Tour.

Many players could:

  • beat tour players

  • have hot runs

  • hit the odd 100+ average

  • win qualifiers

But a season-long 90+ average?
That’s a different world — a world only a small percentage of global players can enter.

That’s what makes Beau Greaves’ numbers so extraordinary.
And it will be fascinating to see:

  • how she adapts,

  • whether any other players can join her in that >90 group,

  • and which regions — if any — start to close the gap.

The door to the Pro Tour is wider than ever… but holding that standard once inside?
That’s still one of the hardest challenges in darts.

test post

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High Stakes Under-55 at Browns Bar : A Tough Day but Plenty of Positives

 Yesterday was the High Stakes Under-55 Average tournament at Browns Bar, and the standard was absolutely brutal. A lot of players there were right on the fringe of the 55 cap, the sort of field where every leg feels like a mini-final.

I ended up in a three-player group, but don’t let that fool you ,all three of us were throwing mid-50 averages and pushing each other hard. I actually played some of my best stuff for a while, finishing the group stage with a 55.22 overall average and a 59.22 first-nine, plus a handful of 100+ scores.

In my final group match I started brilliantly with a 20-dart leg, but after that I just seemed to run out of steam. Whether it was concentration, blood sugar, or simply mental fatigue, the second leg just wasn’t there. It cost me the match, and with that, my shot at progressing.

That meant dropping into the Second Chance competition ,but honestly, by then I had nothing left. My throw completely deserted me. It felt like I’d forgotten how to play the game I’d been doing so well with only an hour earlier.

So yes, disappointing in the end… but there were positives:

  • A tournament average over 55

  • Strong grouping in the early legs

  • Good 100+ scoring

  • A reminder that the throw is improving

  • And a better first nine than I’ve had in months

The big battle, as always, is the head game. Staying calm between darts. Not overthinking. Not letting one bad visit spiral into three. It’s something I’m still researching, learning about, and  slowly., getting better at.

I’ll keep building on the positives and keep searching for that consistent mindset. Something is moving in the right direction, even if I need a bit of help unlocking the mental side.

Onwards.

Just a footnote, I used some new K-Flex flights today which felt really good. Could be my head, but I'll take any positives!

Saturday, November 15, 2025

What Happened to Spanish Darts? A Look at a Nation That Once Looked Ready to Break Through

 Not that long ago, Spain looked like an emerging force in world darts. There was a moment where it genuinely felt like they were about to push into the same 'rising nation' bracket as Portugal, Poland, and Czech Republic. But somewhere along the way, the momentum slowed.

So where is Spanish darts now — and is a resurgence still possible?


The Golden Spell: Reyes, Alcinas and the 2010 Shock

If you were watching darts in the mid-2010s, you’ll remember the excitement surrounding two standout Spanish players:

  • Cristo Reyes – who famously reached the Last 16 of the PDC World Championship in 2015, playing fearless, heavy-scoring darts. He also made TV runs at the World Matchplay and looked, for a while, like he was going to be a long-term Top 32 contender.

  • Toni Alcinas – who reached the Last 16 of the World Championship in 2018, and of course was part of one of the biggest World Cup upsets of all time:
    Spain beating England (Phil Taylor & James Wade) at the 2010 PDC World Cup of Darts.
    That shock result briefly catapulted Spanish darts into the spotlight.

Back then, it felt like Spain was just one good player away from becoming a genuinely competitive nation.

The Current Picture: A Much Quieter Era

Fast forward to 2024–25, and things are… quiet.

The main Spanish names in recent years have been:

  • Jesús Noguera – former Tour Card holder, Challenge Tour winner in 2019. Active, but no major 2025 breakthroughs.

  • José Justicia – another former Tour Card holder, but not active on the Challenge Tour in 2025.

  • Tony Martínez – Spanish-born, held a Tour Card but without big TV-stage breakthroughs.

  • Carlos Rodríguez – historic Spanish player, mostly competed in the 2010–2015 era.

None of these players are currently making deep runs on the Pro Tour or televised events.
There are also no Spanish winners or top-16 players on the 2025 PDC Challenge Tour or Development Tour, based on all publicly available information.


Outside the PDC: Catalonia Leads the Way

In the WDF system, the top 'Spanish region' player right now is:

Daniel Zapata (Catalonia)

Highly ranked in the WDF Main Rankings, regularly competing across Western Europe. While Catalonia competes separately, Zapata is still a great indicator of talent from the broader Spanish darts ecosystem.

But again , like the PDC picture, there isn’t a large group of upcoming Spanish players pushing into major finals or making huge waves.


Has Spain Stalled?

You could argue that Spain was an emerging nation , but stalled just before they reached the next tier.

Possible reasons:

  • Fewer domestic darts tournaments compared to northern Europe

  • Less financial support or sponsorship opportunities

  • No consistent stream of junior Spanish players entering PDC pathways

  • Losing the momentum after Reyes and Alcinas peaked

  • Limited TV exposure for darts across Spain

The talent is there, but the structure for long-term development hasn’t quite followed.


A Glimmer of Hope: The JDC World Championship (24 November 2025)

The next big opportunity for Spain  could come from the youth system.

The JDC World Championship begins on 24 November 2025, held in Gibraltar ,which is right on Spain’s doorstep.

If Spain enters a team, it could be a huge chance for young players to:

  • get international experience,

  • compete on a proper stage,

  • and possibly become the next Reyes, Alcinas… or something even bigger.

A new Spanish star coming through the JDC system could be exactly what’s needed to get the nation back on track.


Conclusion: Spain Isn’t Gone - It’s Waiting for Its Next Spark

Spanish darts hasn’t disappeared… it’s simply waiting for the next breakout moment.

With the JDC World Championships so close to home this year, and with the pathway into the PDC clearer than ever, there’s no reason Spain can’t rise again. One good junior crop, one special youth player, one fresh run at the World Cup  and the country could very quickly become a name to watch again.

A Quick Thank You

 Just a quick post to say a massive thank you to everyone who’s been reading, following, and supporting the blog recently.

The visitor numbers have been growing really well, and it honestly means a lot.


I started this as a small project, and seeing it build week by week has given me a real boost to keep going, keep writing, and keep growing this into something bigger.


Your support genuinely helps  so thank you!

Plenty more posts, ideas, and updates to come.

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Practice Update: Back to Basics and Building Confidence

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