sleek, the reason I don't quite agree with you is that the examples you give - darts or pool - are open contests between two parties playing by the same rules. The murders are something quite different, and I see the odds as being stacked quite heavily in the murderer's favour: no-one knows he's out to play darts, he has his darts hidden in his coat. His victims are weaker than he, and have their own reason for going with him to places that are relatively secluded, dark, and off the beaten track. A couple of minutes with a knife, and he's gone. A limited number of police, no forensic science to speak of, and a killer who has no timetable to follow, who can wait until the opportune moment, the right person in the right place at the right time.
Take Sutcliffe - he was no cunning genius. He left tire tracks, a five pound note with one of his victims, he was interviewed many times, but somehow the cops never quite joined all the dots. He was opportunistic, and extremely lucky, and that was enough to allow him to kill nearly three times as many women as Jack, over a far longer time period, and in an age of significantly more advanced investigative techniques.
Take Sutcliffe - he was no cunning genius. He left tire tracks, a five pound note with one of his victims, he was interviewed many times, but somehow the cops never quite joined all the dots. He was opportunistic, and extremely lucky, and that was enough to allow him to kill nearly three times as many women as Jack, over a far longer time period, and in an age of significantly more advanced investigative techniques.
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