Darts legend Bobby George who broke his back celebrating on live TV reveals he keeps amputated toe in a bottle of vodka

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BOBBY GEORGE has revealed he keeps one of his four amputated TOES in a bottle of vodka behind the bar of his 18-bedroom Essex mansion.

Eccentric ex-darts star George — one of the sport’s most recognisable figures — had four operations to remove four toes, two on each foot, due to a painful genetic deformity.

A smiling darts player wearing many gold chains and rings, holding darts.  A dartboard is in the background.Shutterstock Editorial
Bobby George was one of sport’s most flamboyant stars[/caption]
Bobby George throwing a dart at the 1993 BDO Embassy World Darts Championship.Shutterstock Editorial
The King of Bling faced extraordinary pain from his toes[/caption]

Three of them had to be discarded but he was allowed to keep the first one chopped off 26 years ago — and stores it at his self-built home George Hall.

Writing in a new book — Still Here! The King of Bling — George, 79, declared: “Nobody believes me, or at least they don’t, until they see me without my socks on.

“Or if they come to my bar in George Hall and see the evidence for themselves.

“There’s some sort of gene in my body that has caused the toes  to pop out of their socket and cross over.

“It got so bad that I couldn’t get my shoes on.

“I couldn’t walk without checking my balance each step.

“It was so painful on some days that if I’d had a sharp enough knife I would have chopped them off myself.

“There was nothing that the  medical profession could do, so it became ‘Operation Toot-Toot-Tootsie Bye-Bye’.

 Bobby George, The King of Bling, with Dave Bracegirdle.Geroge’s new book details an amazing journey in life and darts

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“The first one was cut off in 1999 and it was actually a great relief when it was all over.

“I knew the surgeon, a bloke called Phil, and he talked me through the procedure — something called a tulip operation.

“It’s done under local anaesthetic, so I was able to watch him cut it off.

“It didn’t hurt and once the deed was done, Phil showed it to me and I asked him if I could keep it.

“Phil presented it to me in a little jar but said that he couldn’t give me the proper stuff — formaldehyde, maybe? — as it was poisonous.

“But if I used vodka instead, that would preserve it beautifully. So I took it home and popped it in some vodka and now it has a permanent home behind the bar in George Hall.

“Whenever anyone comes to the house for a drink, I whip it out and ask them if they want a cocktail or a cocktoe?

“It’s also meant that, over the years, if I’ve been away from home for any length of time and my wife, Marie, is missing me, she can always suck my toe!

“Removing one tootsie wasn’t enough, though, and eventually the procedure had to be repeated another three times, so I’m missing two toes on each foot.

“Unfortunately, none of the other surgeons have been as obliging as Phil and they wouldn’t let me take the sawn-off digits away with me.

“Losing four toes hasn’t been  as bad as it may sound, although when I go barefoot I do look like an alien.”

Bobby George throwing a dart at the 1982 Winmau World Darts Championships.Shutterstock Editorial
He spent much of a £16k runners-up cheque on surgery[/caption]

George — who lost in two BDO World Darts Championship finals, in 1980 and 1994 — says he pops “16 tablets a day for pain relief”.

That is because he has “shocking arthritis in my hips” and BROKE his back on the famous Lakeside stage 31 years ago.

During a 4-2 win over Kevin Kenny in the quarters at Frimley Green, George leapt in the air in celebration and “felt a sharp pain in my back”.

He was in “constant excruciating pain for the remainder of the match”, which was broadcast on TV.

Following X-rays the next day, a doctor told him: “You can’t play darts.

“You shouldn’t even be able to walk. You’ve broken your back, Mr George.”

The King of Bling — who used to come on to stage holding a candelabra to the Queen song ‘We Are the Champions’ — reached the final where he was thumped 6-0 by Canadian John Part.

George said: “I was fortunate not to have been paralysed but I still required immediate surgery, which my £16,000 runners-up cheque helped to finance.

“Eight titanium screws, each around two inches long, were inserted into the base of my spine to help me on the long road to recovery.”

  •  STILL HERE! The King of Bling, published by Pitch  Publishing, is out today.
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