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Champions League of Darts

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Darts tournament
Champions League of Darts
Tournament information
VenueMotorpoint Arena Cardiff (2016–17)
Brighton Centre (2018)
Morningside Arena (2019)
LocationCardiff (2016–17)
Brighton (2018)
Leicester (2019)
CountryUnited Kingdom
Established2016
Organisation(s)PDC
FormatLegs, Group Stage and Knockout
Prize fund£250,000 (2019)
Month(s) PlayedSeptember
Final Year2019
Final champion(s)
NetherlandsMichael van Gerwen

TheChampions League of Darts, also known as thePaddy Power Champions League of Darts for sponsorship purposes,[1] was a non-rankingdarts tournament organised by theProfessional Darts Corporation held each year in September from 2016 until 2019. Featuring just the top eight players in the PDC, it was played over two days in a group stage, and then knockout format and was the smallest of the PDC's televised premier events.

It was first held in September 2016 at theMotorpoint Arena inCardiff, the inaugural champion wasPhil Taylor. The next two were then won byMensur Suljović andGary Anderson, before the final champion wasMichael van Gerwen in 2019. Following the cancellation of the 2020 tournament, owing to theCOVID-19 pandemic, the tournament was quietly shelved by the PDC.

The tournament was the first PDC event to be broadcast on theBBC.

History

[edit]

The details of the inaugural tournament were announced by the PDC on 9 February 2016, in conjunction with the announcement of a new broadcasting deal between the PDC and theBBC.[2] With the PDC 2016 calendar having already been announced in August 2015, a Barnsley round of the PDC Player Championship was moved to accommodate it.[3] A second Champions League tournament was duly announced as part of the August 2016 release of the 2017 calendar.[2] A further two editions were held, before the fifth edition, which was due to be held in 2020, was cancelled as a result of theCOVID-19 pandemic. The tournament was subsequently shelved by thePDC.

In addition to the prize money allocated to players, the tournament was known for a £100,000 cash prize given to the crowd in the event of anine-dart finish. This prize was believed to be the biggest crowd prize in world sport.[4]

Eligibility

[edit]

Only the top eight players on thePDC Order of Merit qualified for the inaugural tournament, signifying the best eight players in the PDC (in 2016 based on the order following theWorld Matchplay in July[2]). Starting with 2017, the reigning champion was given a guaranteed slot, meaning only the top seven and the champion would qualify if the champion was not in the top eight.[5]

Format

[edit]

The tournament format is a group stage followed by aknockout stage. The group stage features two groups of four, who meet each other in around-robin format, i.e. each player playing their group opponents once in a single match. The best two players in each group advance to the semi-finals, the winners meeting in the final. There is no third place play-off. Matches in the group stage are won by the first player to win 10legs (best of 19), while the knockout stages are first to 11 (best of 21).

Champions League of Darts finals

[edit]
YearChampion(average in final)ScoreRunner-up(average in final)Prize moneySponsorVenue
TotalChampionRunner-up
2016EnglandPhil Taylor(98.97)11–5NetherlandsMichael van Gerwen(100.92)£250,000£100,000£50,000UnibetWalesMotorpoint Arena,Cardiff
2017AustriaMensur Suljović(87.85)11–9ScotlandGary Anderson(98.03)
2018ScotlandGary Anderson(101.47)11–4ScotlandPeter Wright(93.85)Paddy PowerEnglandBrighton Centre,Brighton
2019NetherlandsMichael van Gerwen(100.87)11–10ScotlandPeter Wright(97.42)EnglandMorningside Arena,Leicester
2020Cancelled due toCOVID-19 pandemic.[6]

Records and statistics

[edit]
As of 20 October 2019.

Total finalist appearances

[edit]
RankPlayerNationalityWonRunner-upFinalsAppearances
1Gary Anderson Scotland1122
Michael van Gerwen Netherlands1122
3Mensur Suljović Austria1011
Phil Taylor England1011
5Peter Wright Scotland0222
  • Active players are shown inbold

High averages

[edit]
Ten highest Champions League of Darts one-match averages
AveragePlayerYear (+ Round)OpponentResult
111.23NetherlandsMichael van Gerwen2018, Group stageEnglandDave Chisnall10–2
108.31EnglandPhil Taylor2016, Group stageScotlandRobert Thornton10–2
107.49EnglandPhil Taylor2016, Group stageNetherlandsMichael van Gerwen10–4
105.67NetherlandsMichael van Gerwen2016, Semi-finalsScotlandGary Anderson11–5
105.54NetherlandsMichael van Gerwen2019, Semi-finalsWalesGerwyn Price11–10
105.53AustriaMensur Suljović2018, Group stageScotlandPeter Wright10–7
104.13NetherlandsMichael van Gerwen2016, Group stageEnglandPhil Taylor4–10
103.49EnglandJames Wade2016, Group stageEnglandAdrian Lewis10–3
103.52ScotlandPeter Wright2019, Semi-finalsEnglandMichael Smith11–5
103.40NetherlandsMichael van Gerwen2019, Group stageEnglandJames Wade10–8
Five highest Champions League of Darts losing averages
AveragePlayerYear (+ Round)OpponentResult
104.13NetherlandsMichael van Gerwen2016, Group stageEnglandPhil Taylor4–10
102.89NetherlandsMichael van Gerwen2017, Group stageEnglandPhil Taylor9–10
102.49WalesGerwyn Price2019, Semi-finalsNetherlandsMichael van Gerwen10–11
102.13ScotlandPeter Wright2018, Group stageAustriaMensur Suljović7–10
101.48ScotlandGary Anderson2018, Group stageNorthern IrelandDaryl Gurney8–10

Broadcaster

[edit]

The tournament was the first PDC event to be broadcast on theBBC, after they ended their contract to broadcast rights of theBDO World Darts Championship.[2]

Sponsorship

[edit]

In 2016 and 2017, the title sponsor of the tournament was bookmakerUnibet, who for the 2016 season were the pre-existing sponsors of the PDC'sMasters andEuropean Championship, and the new sponsor of the PDC'sWorld Grand Prix.[7]Since 2018 the tournament has been sponsored by bookmakerPaddy Power.

References

[edit]
  1. ^"News | PDC".www.pdc.tv. Retrieved24 April 2019.
  2. ^abcd"BBC Deal For Champions League of Darts".PDC. Archived fromthe original on 12 February 2016. Retrieved9 February 2016.
  3. ^"News | PDC".www.pdc.tv. Retrieved16 October 2016.
  4. ^"Champions League of Darts heads to Leicester with £100,000 up for grabs for fans".Sky Sports. Retrieved24 April 2019.
  5. ^Allen, Dave."New BBC Deal For Unibet Champions League".PDC. Retrieved21 June 2017.
  6. ^"Events Update: May & June 2020".PDC. Retrieved22 April 2020.
  7. ^"Unibet Throw Support Behind Champions League".PDC. Archived fromthe original on 27 September 2016. Retrieved25 September 2016.

External links

[edit]
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