European Championship (darts)

Summary

The European Championship is a PDC darts tournament which was created to allow the top European players to compete with the highest ranked players from the PDC Order of Merit. Since 2016, the tournament has taken place at the end of October, and features the top 32 players on the PDC European Tour Order of Merit.

European Championship
Tournament information
VenueWestfalenhallen
LocationDortmund
Country Germany
Established2008
Organisation(s)PDC
FormatLegs
Prize fund£500,000 (2020)
Month(s) PlayedVarious (2008–2013)
October/November (2014–)
Current champion(s)
Scotland Peter Wright

History edit

The inaugural tournament – the 2008 European Championship – was held at the Südbahnhof in Frankfurt, Germany and featured a prize fund of £200,000.[1]

The tournament moved to the Claus Hotel & Event Center in Hoofddorp, Netherlands for 2009 featuring a similar prize fund.[2] The tournament returned to Germany in 2010, where it was held at Dinslaken. The 2011 tournament remained in Germany, only this time, it took place in Düsseldorf – the capital of North Rhine-Westphalia. From 2012 to 2014, the tournament took place in Mülheim, Germany, then between 2015 and 2017, the tournament took place in Hasselt, Belgium, but in 2018, the tournament returned to Germany, moving to the Westfalenhallen in Dortmund. It moved to Göttingen in 2019, before moving to the König Pilsener Arena in Oberhausen in 2020, and then the Salzburgarena in Salzburg, Austria in 2021, before returning to Dortmund again in 2022.

Phil Taylor won the tournament on each of the first four stagings of the event, before Simon Whitlock took the title in 2012. Adrian Lewis gained his third major win after beating Whitlock in the 2013 edition of the tournament. Michael van Gerwen won the tournament for the first time in 2014 beating Terry Jenkins in the final. In 2015, van Gerwen came back from 7–10 behind to defeat Gary Anderson 11–10 in the final, then he beat Mensur Suljović 11–1 in the 2016 final, and he won it for a fourth year in a row in 2017, when he defeated Rob Cross 11–7 in the 2017 final. In 2018, James Wade won the title, and in 2019 Rob Cross became European champion, then Peter Wright won in 2020, before Cross regained the title in 2021.

Finals edit

Year Champion (average in final) Score Runner-up (average in final) Prize money Sponsor Venue
Total Champion Runner-up
2008   Phil Taylor (104.35) 11–5   Adrian Lewis (96.56) £200,000 £50,000 £25,000 PartyPoker.net   Südbahnhof, Frankfurt
2009   Phil Taylor (109.35) 11–3   Steve Beaton (97.16) £20,000   Claus Event Center, Hoofddorp
2010   Phil Taylor (105.74) 11–1   Wayne Jones (94.64)   Stadthalle Dinslaken, Dinslaken
2011   Phil Taylor (109.29) 11–8   Adrian Lewis (98.72)   Maritim Hotel, Düsseldorf
2012   Simon Whitlock (94.91) 11–5   Wes Newton (89.47)   RWE-Sporthalle, Mülheim
2013   Adrian Lewis (103.34) 11–6   Simon Whitlock (99.59)
2014   Michael van Gerwen (98.16) 11–4   Terry Jenkins (92.90) £250,000 £55,000 £25,000 888.com
2015   Michael van Gerwen (107.28) 11–10   Gary Anderson (102.42) £300,000 £65,000 £35,000 Unibet   Ethias Arena, Hasselt
2016   Michael van Gerwen (111.62) 11–1   Mensur Suljović (85.91) £400,000 £100,000 £40,000
2017   Michael van Gerwen (108.91) 11–7   Rob Cross (102.39)
2018   James Wade (91.44) 11–8   Simon Whitlock (88.81)   Westfalenhallen, Dortmund
2019   Rob Cross (93.12) 11–6   Gerwyn Price (84.51) £500,000 £120,000 £60,000   Lokhalle, Göttingen
2020   Peter Wright (104.33) 11–4   James Wade (95.28)   König Pilsener Arena, Oberhausen
2021   Rob Cross (92.91) 11–8   Michael van Gerwen (93.66) Cazoo   Salzburgarena, Salzburg
2022   Ross Smith (101.32) 11–8   Michael Smith (100.47)   Westfalenhallen, Dortmund
2023   Peter Wright (97.39) 11–6   James Wade (92.09) Machineseeker

Records and statistics edit

As of 29 October 2023

Total finalist appearances edit

Rank Player Won Runner-up Finals Appearances
1   Michael van Gerwen 4 1 5 15
2   Phil Taylor 4 0 4 9
3   Rob Cross 2 1 3 7
4   Peter Wright 2 0 2 12
5   Adrian Lewis 1 2 3 10
  Simon Whitlock 1 2 3 11
  James Wade 1 2 3 15
8   Ross Smith 1 0 1 4
9   Gary Anderson 0 1 1 6
  Steve Beaton 0 1 1 5
  Terry Jenkins 0 1 1 9
  Wayne Jones 0 1 1 4
  Michael Smith 0 1 1 10
  Wes Newton 0 1 1 6
  Gerwyn Price 0 1 1 9
  Mensur Suljović 0 1 1 13

Champions by country edit

Country Players Total First title Last title
  England 5 9 2008 2022
  Netherlands 1 4 2014 2017
  Scotland 1 2 2020 2023
  Australia 1 1 2012 2012

Nine-dart finishes edit

Four nine-darters have been thrown at the European Championship. The first one was in 2011.

Player Year (+ Round) Method Opponent Result
  Adrian Lewis 2011, Semi-Final 3 x T20; 3 x T20; T20, T19, D12   Raymond van Barneveld 11–10
  Michael van Gerwen 2014, Semi-Final 2 x T20, T19; 3 x T20; 2 x T20, D12   Raymond van Barneveld 11–6
  Kyle Anderson 2017, Semi-Final 3 x T20; 3 x T20, T20, T19, D12   Michael van Gerwen 10–11
  José de Sousa 2020, Last 32 3 x T20; 2 x T20, T19; 2 x T20, D12   Jeffrey de Zwaan 6–3

High averages edit

Ten highest European Championship one-match averages
Average Player Year (+ Round) Opponent Result
118.14   Phil Taylor 2009, Quarter-Final   Gary Anderson 10–3
113.92   Phil Taylor 2008, Last 16   Mervyn King 9–3
113.33   Phil Taylor 2008, Semi-Final   Robert Thornton 11–7
113.04   Raymond van Barneveld 2012, Last 32   Terry Jenkins 6–1
111.62   Michael van Gerwen 2016, Final   Mensur Suljović 11–1
111.33   Jonny Clayton 2019, Last 32   James Wade 6–0
111.03   Phil Taylor 2009, Last 32   Toon Greebe 6–2
111.00   Michael van Gerwen 2014, Quarter-Final   Dave Chisnall 10–5
110.88   Phil Taylor 2009, Last 16   Robert Thornton 9–0
110.32   Michael van Gerwen 2018, Last 32   Paul Nicholson 6–2
Five highest losing averages
Average Player Year (+ Round) Opponent Result
107.56   Gerwyn Price 2021, Quarter-Final   Michael van Gerwen 8–10
106.12   Gary Anderson 2009, Quarter-Final   Phil Taylor 3–10
106.12   Phil Taylor 2015, Quarter-Final   Adrian Lewis 9–10
105.10   Michael van Gerwen 2019, Last 32   Ross Smith 5–6
104.92   Madars Razma 2023, Last 32   Michael van Gerwen 5–6
Different players with a 100+ match average (Updated 29/10/23)
Player Total Highest Av. Year (+ Round)
  Michael van Gerwen 29 111.62 2016, Final
  Phil Taylor 26 118.14 2009, Quarter-Final
  Peter Wright 14 104.74 2015, Semi-Final
  Adrian Lewis 8 108.62 2008, Quarter-Final
  Gerwyn Price 8 107.56 2021, Quarter-Final
  Raymond van Barneveld 7 113.04 2012, Last 32
  Dave Chisnall 6 109.75 2019, Last 16
  Michael Smith 6 106.09 2019, Last 32
  Jonny Clayton 4 111.33 2019, Last 32
  Gary Anderson 4 106.26 2015, Semi-Final
  Mervyn King 4 104.00 2009, Last 16
  Colin Lloyd 4 104.00 2009, Last 16
  Nathan Aspinall 4 103.34 2021, Quarter-Final
  Stephen Bunting 4 102.68 2014, Last 32
  Danny Noppert 4 102.31 2021, Last 32
  Mensur Suljović 3 105.50 2016, Quarter-Final
  Dirk van Duijvenbode 3 104.15 2022, Quarter-Final
  Ryan Searle 3 102.43 2022, Last 32
  Rob Cross 3 102.39 2017, Final
  Ross Smith 3 101.63 2022, Last 32
  Devon Petersen 2 106.30 2020, Quarter-Final
  Chris Dobey 2 104.63 2022, Quarter-Final
  Mark Walsh 2 104.10 2008, Last 32
  Jelle Klaasen 2 103.76 2013, Last 16
  Ian White 2 103.64 2020, Last 16
  Simon Whitlock 2 102.52 2011, Last 32
  Robert Thornton 2 102.12 2008, Semi-Final
  James Wade 2 101.81 2011, Last 16
  Josh Rock 2 101.69 2022, Last 16
  Dimitri Van den Bergh 2 101.53 2022, Last 32
  Gian van Veen 1 107.34 2023, Last 32
  Wes Newton 1 106.09 2012, Last 32
  Jamie Caven 1 106.09 2013, Last 32
  José de Sousa 1 105.28 2022, Last 32
  Madars Razma 1 104.92 2023, Last 32
  Brendan Dolan 1 104.68 2014, Last 32
  Ricardo Pietreczko 1 104.28 2023, Last 32
  James Wilson 1 103.64 2018, Last 32
  Dennis Priestley 1 102.35 2008, Last 16
  Luke Humphries 1 102.15 2022, Last 32
  Jeffrey de Zwaan 1 101.87 2019, Last 32
  Colin Osborne 1 101.80 2009, Last 16
  Steve West 1 101.67 2018, Quarter-Final
  Damon Heta 1 101.66 2021, Last 16
  Paul Nicholson 1 101.61 2011, Last 32
  Ronnie Baxter 1 101.45 2011, Last 32
  Martin Schindler 1 101.15 2022, Last 32
  Kyle Anderson 1 101.09 2018, Last 32
  Vincent van der Voort 1 101.09 2014, Last 32
  Ronny Huybrechts 1 100.97 2013, Last 32
  Kim Huybrechts 1 100.86 2015, Last 32
  Cristo Reyes 1 100.69 2015, Last 32
  Robert Wagner 1 100.59 2014, Last 32
  Gabriel Clemens 1 100.36 2020, Last 32
  Darius Labanauskas 1 100.06 2020, Last 32
  Terry Jenkins 1 100.06 2014, Last 32
Five highest tournament averages
Average Player Year
111.54   Phil Taylor 2009
108.20   Phil Taylor 2008
105.87   Phil Taylor 2016
105.53   Michael van Gerwen 2016
105.15   Michael van Gerwen 2015

Television coverage edit

The PDC announced on August 12, 2008 that ITV4 would broadcast the entire event.[1] This was the second PDC darts tournament that ITV4 have broadcast, after the inaugural Grand Slam of Darts – after its rating success ITV had chosen to broadcast this event as well as the 2008 Grand Slam of Darts.

The 2009 event was not televised in the UK, but the 2010 event was broadcast on Bravo, which screened live darts for the first time in its history.[3] However, Bravo ceased broadcasting at the start of 2011. On June 26, 2011, it was announced that ITV4 would broadcast the 2011 event.[4] In the Netherlands it is broadcast on RTL7 and in Germany it is broadcast on Sport1. On August 8, 2012 it was announced that ESPN would televise the event, becoming the first broadcaster to show both BDO and PDC dart tournaments. From 2013, the tournament returned to ITV4 as part of a deal between ITV and the PDC to show 4 tournaments from the PDC calendar.

List of United Kingdom broadcasters edit

  • 2008; 2011; 2013–present: ITV4
  • 2010: Bravo
  • 2012: ESPN
  • 2009: not televised in the UK

Sponsorship edit

PartyPoker.net sponsored first six editions of the tournament – they also sponsored the US Open and the Las Vegas Desert Classic, two other non-defunct televised PDC events. In 2014, 888.com took over sponsoring of the tournament for one edition, with the tournament being sponsored by Unibet since 2015. [5] In 2021, the tournament will be sponsored by Cazoo, who will also sponsor the PDC World Cup of Darts and the Grand Slam of Darts.

References edit

  1. ^ a b PDC website report – European Championship Details Confirmed Archived 2008-08-15 at the Wayback Machine from the Professional Darts Corporation, retrieved 12-08-2008
  2. ^ "European Championship Venue". pdc.tv. 2009-04-22. Archived from the original on 2009-04-25. Retrieved 2009-04-23.
  3. ^ "PDC Link Up With Bravo". pdc.tv. 2010-05-22. Archived from the original on 2010-05-25. Retrieved 2010-05-22.
  4. ^ "European Championship On ITV4". pdc.tv. 2011-06-24. Archived from the original on 2011-06-27. Retrieved 2011-06-24.
  5. ^ "888.com European Championship Darts Preview , Schedule of Play & Results - SportsNewsIRELAND". Archived from the original on 2014-10-25. Retrieved 2014-10-25.

External links edit

  • European Championship page on the PDC website
  • European Championship on Darts Database