Peter Hunt | |
---|---|
Personal information | |
Nickname | Stumpy |
Born | 1965 Greytown, New Zealand |
Home town | Palmerston North, New Zealand |
Darts information | |
Playing darts since | 1993 |
Organisation (see split in darts) | |
BDO | 1993- |
Current world ranking | (BDO) 61 |
BDO majors - best performances | |
World Ch'ship | Last 16: 1995 |
World Darts Trophy | Last 32: 2003, 2004 |
Int. Darts League | Last 16 Group: 2004 |
Other tournament wins | |
Tournament | Years |
Australian Grand Masters DPNZ Hawkes Bay Open New Zealand Masters New Zealand Open North Island Masters Ted Clements Open WDF World Rankings Asia Pacific |
2003 2012 1993, 1997, 1998, 1999, 2002, 2009, 2010 2003, 2010 2009, 2011, 2012 2011, 2012 2010 |
Peter Hunt (born 1965) is a New Zealand darts player who currently plays in the BDO/WDF circuit. With multiple titles to his name, he is one of New Zealand's leading darts players.
Hunt has played in four BDO World Darts Championships, first qualifying in 1993, the last unified World Championship before the infamous split in darts, losing 3-0 to Scotland's Ronnie Sharp. He returned in 1995, beating Belgium's Stefan Eeckelaert 3-0 in the first round before losing 3-2 in the second round to Colin Monk. It would be eight years before Hunt returned to Lakeside in 2003, losing in the first round to Bob Taylor. He returned a year layer, but again lost in round one to Paul Hogan.
Hunt also played twice in the International Darts League. In 2003, he lost both of his opening group games to Vincent van der Voort and Tony O'Shea and was eliminated despite beating Shaun Greatbatch. In 2004, Hunt won his opening two group games against Tony David and Co Stompé and qualified for the last 16 group stages. But after two crushing defeats, 7-1 against Mervyn King and 7-0 against Martin Adams, Hunt was eliminated but managed to restore some pride in a 7-6 win over Vincent van der Voort.
Hunt played in the World Darts Trophy twice but lost in the first round on both occasions. In 2003, he lost 3-2 to Bob Taylor and in 2004, he was beaten by Raymond van Barneveld 3-1.