
James Wade locked in another ‘FARTGATE' storm as disgusting act caught on live TV and called out by referee
Click to share on Facebook (Opens in new window)
JAMES WADE was involved in yet another dart 'fartgate' incident in Players Championship 17.
The World No.10 kicked up a stink in a clash with fellow veteran star Peter Wright in Leicester.
Sign up for Scottish Sun
newsletter
Sign up
3
James Wade tried to explain his actions in an exchange with Peter Wright
3
'Snakebite' was the innocent party in a clear case of Wright 'n pong
Wade let rip during his 6-5 win over 'Snakebite' to reach the quarter-finals on Tuesday afternoon.
Wright stepped back and laughed uncomfortably, but Wade's joke quickly backfired when the match caller told him the clash was being televised.
Referee Owen Binks then informed the players: 'Oh boy, okay then… This is a streamed match guys.'
Wade claimed: 'It slipped out.' And then added: 'Give it a second.'
READ MORE IN DARTS
PRICED OUT Bankrupt former World Darts semi-finalist stuns Gerwyn Price in timely boost
Wright thought it needed more than a second, though.
And Wade tried to prompt him back onto the oche, saying: 'Go ahead. Do you want nine more arrows?'
It's not the first time the 42-year-old has passed wind during a match.
He did the same less than a year ago in September 2024, also at the Players Championship.
BEST ONLINE CASINOS - TOP SITES IN THE UK
On that occasion he claimed it was his SHOES that made the noise.
He wrote on social media: 'I feel I must address a situation following my run to the semi-finals of PC22 today.
Darts star Daryl Gurney screams X-rated rant about his 'b------s' on stage at World Cup
'Footage has emerged of me doing what appears to be a 'shart' at the end of one of my matches.
'It was actually the Velcro on my new trainers.
"I now consider this matter put to bed as don't wish to talk about it again.'
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


North Wales Chronicle
15 minutes ago
- North Wales Chronicle
Kate Cross expects results under ‘queen of English cricket' Charlotte Edwards
Charlotte Edwards, who captained England to 50-over and T20 World Cup glory in 2009, replaced Jon Lewis as head coach in April and has just a few months to mould her team before the 2025 edition of the former competition in India and Sri Lanka. Edwards will send her side into the first of three one-day internationals against India in Southampton on Wednesday on the back of 3-2 T20 series defeat by the same opposition, with Cross confident her inspirational former captain can make a significant impact. ODI squad assemble! 😍 Training vibes high 👊 — England Cricket (@englandcricket) July 15, 2025 The Lancashire pace bowler said: 'She is the queen of English cricket, isn't she? 'I spoke in a press conference months ago about how Lottie was the captain that gave me my debut cap, so it's kind of like a full-circle moment for me where one of the best English cricketers to play the game is now leading the team. 'She's so passionate about English cricket and so passionate about women's cricket. She's the biggest badger I know – she's literally watched every ball that you bowl or every ball that you face, she's really on it. She's got about seven laptops, I think, to watch all the Blast games. 'But her knowledge around the game is just phenomenal, so I think we feel really lucky that we've had a coach with that sort of experience, but also with the career that she had in the game, come in to help guide us and make us a better team, so it's been brilliant.' Edwards has work to do as she attempts to restore England's fortunes after a difficult year which has included a 16-0 Ashes whitewash, and she has vowed to make fitness one of the key elements of her regime. However, Cross revealed she has set about her task with a smile on her face. She said: 'She's not just not changed at all. She's still the same Lottie that was my captain eight or nine years ago, so it's been really lovely for me personally to have her around. 'She's just great fun as well. She's always chuckling and making you laugh, which is a really nice place to be in an international dressing room.' On the pitch, Nat Sciver-Brunt's side are still getting to grips with Edwards' philosophy, and Cross insists they need time to do that as they attempt to eradicate the failings which have cost them so dearly in recent times. She said: 'It's difficult. I know we're getting still quite a lot of press around our fielding. It's not where we want it to be and we know there's been some mistakes made in key moments. 'But hopefully if we can be judged in six months', eight months', 12 months' time when the new regime has had a chance to kind of bed in, then hopefully those comments that are made will be… not fairer, because I think the comments that were being made are quite fair at the moment. 'But you'll only then see the changes which will fit with the new regime that Lottie wants to bring in.'


Times
an hour ago
- Times
It's like 2005 again… spats, niggles and flare-ups but mutual respect
W ith Ben Stokes and Jofra Archer centre stage at Lord's on Monday, much was made of the six-year anniversary of the World Cup final, when, inspired by both players, England won a tight encounter against New Zealand, just as they did against India. Yet, when Mohammed Siraj slumped over his bat moments after the leg bail had plopped down ever so gently from its groove, there was another anniversary that resonated too. As Joe Root and Zak Crawley went to commiserate with the disconsolate Siraj, it was impossible not to think back to the 2005 Ashes and the moment, seconds after the end of the Edgbaston match of that series, when Brett Lee went to his haunches in similar fashion, to be consoled by Andrew Flintoff. It became the defining image of the summer, much as, one suspects, the final moments of the Lord's Test will become for this one.

Rhyl Journal
an hour ago
- Rhyl Journal
Kate Cross expects results under ‘queen of English cricket' Charlotte Edwards
Charlotte Edwards, who captained England to 50-over and T20 World Cup glory in 2009, replaced Jon Lewis as head coach in April and has just a few months to mould her team before the 2025 edition of the former competition in India and Sri Lanka. Edwards will send her side into the first of three one-day internationals against India in Southampton on Wednesday on the back of 3-2 T20 series defeat by the same opposition, with Cross confident her inspirational former captain can make a significant impact. ODI squad assemble! 😍 Training vibes high 👊 — England Cricket (@englandcricket) July 15, 2025 The Lancashire pace bowler said: 'She is the queen of English cricket, isn't she? 'I spoke in a press conference months ago about how Lottie was the captain that gave me my debut cap, so it's kind of like a full-circle moment for me where one of the best English cricketers to play the game is now leading the team. 'She's so passionate about English cricket and so passionate about women's cricket. She's the biggest badger I know – she's literally watched every ball that you bowl or every ball that you face, she's really on it. She's got about seven laptops, I think, to watch all the Blast games. 'But her knowledge around the game is just phenomenal, so I think we feel really lucky that we've had a coach with that sort of experience, but also with the career that she had in the game, come in to help guide us and make us a better team, so it's been brilliant.' Edwards has work to do as she attempts to restore England's fortunes after a difficult year which has included a 16-0 Ashes whitewash, and she has vowed to make fitness one of the key elements of her regime. However, Cross revealed she has set about her task with a smile on her face. She said: 'She's not just not changed at all. She's still the same Lottie that was my captain eight or nine years ago, so it's been really lovely for me personally to have her around. 'She's just great fun as well. She's always chuckling and making you laugh, which is a really nice place to be in an international dressing room.' On the pitch, Nat Sciver-Brunt's side are still getting to grips with Edwards' philosophy, and Cross insists they need time to do that as they attempt to eradicate the failings which have cost them so dearly in recent times. She said: 'It's difficult. I know we're getting still quite a lot of press around our fielding. It's not where we want it to be and we know there's been some mistakes made in key moments. 'But hopefully if we can be judged in six months', eight months', 12 months' time when the new regime has had a chance to kind of bed in, then hopefully those comments that are made will be… not fairer, because I think the comments that were being made are quite fair at the moment. 'But you'll only then see the changes which will fit with the new regime that Lottie wants to bring in.'