"It was a bit of a disaster but you learn from a loss": English expat in Austria Aaron Hardy gets long-awaited European Tour return after over a decade

PDC
Saturday, 09 May 2026 at 13:43
Aaron Hardy
For Aaron Hardy, Friday evening at the Austrian Darts Open was about more than just winning or losing. The Englishman, who lives in Austria, lost 6-3 to Krzysztof Ratajski in the opening round.
ADVERTISEMENT
But at the same time experienced a special moment in his career. Hardy was standing on a Euro Tour stage again for the first time in eleven years. Although the defeat clearly hurt, feelings of pride and relief were strongest afterwards for the Englishman as he spoke to DartsNews.
Hardy honestly admitted that he struggled with his equipment during the match. According to the Englishman, an experiment with different dart points went completely wrong.
"Fantastic, really pleased. I’m just a little disappointed with the performance. I’ve been trying different things with the points and it didn’t work today. It was a bit of a disaster, but you learn from a loss. I’m thinking positively because I’ve learned something from it," he said to DartsNews afterwards.
The Englishman actually started strongly against Ratajski. He immediately took advantage of mistakes from the Pole and won the opening leg, but after that he increasingly struggled to control his game.
"Yeah, in the warm-up and in practice I felt good, but somehow on stage the darts weren’t flying the way I expected. I don’t know if it was the pressure or the occasion, but I struggled. I got so many strange deflections. It really was probably the worst game I’ve played in a long time. I’m very disappointed, but I’m happy to play against such a great player like Krzysztof Ratajski. He’s a fantastic guy and a fantastic professional. I don’t know him personally, but I’m happy to have taken a few legs off him."
ADVERTISEMENT

Eleven years working towards a comeback

The fact that Hardy was back on a Euro Tour stage after eleven years did not happen by accident. The Englishman stayed involved in darts throughout that entire period, even though he was no longer competing at the highest level.
"Yeah, absolutely. I’ve always been playing darts, always practising at home and trying to improve my technique and get better. I feel good. I feel like I’m coming back, or getting back to my best. I’m really pleased. Just to get here was fantastic."
Qualifying for Graz therefore felt like a huge reward for all those years of work. "Unbelievable. I was very happy. I mean, I’m sad for my friends as well, but personally I was delighted."
Hardy also spoke openly about his life outside darts. The Englishman moved from London to Austria back in 2003 and built a new life there. Nowadays he works at a golf course in Steinerkirchen.
ADVERTISEMENT
"It was, yeah. I’ve been working on the golf course and now I’m at Enns in Steinerkirchen. It’s a beautiful golf course and it’s a lovely place. The people are absolutely fantastic — very friendly, and it’s been a great time."

Love for Austria

During the interview it became clear just how much Austria means to Hardy nowadays. Not only the country itself, but especially the people and culture have left a deep impression on him.
"It’s fabulous. The people, the culture, I love it very much. The food, the beer, it’s all there. The people are friendly, warm, caring, loving. Great people."
Even his walk-on song was deliberately chosen as a nod to Austria. Hardy selected “Fürstenfeld”, an iconic Austrian song. "Yeah, 100 percent. It’s one of my absolute favourites. I absolutely love it. It’s a perfect link to the location here and I thought it was something to get the crowd going. It’s a great song."
ADVERTISEMENT

Proud despite the defeat

Despite his clear disappointment with his own level, Hardy mainly enjoyed the fact that he was once again part of a major Professional Darts Corporation tournament. After eleven years away, simply standing on the stage already felt like a victory in itself.
claps 0visitors 0
loading

Just in

Popular news

Loading