PDC World Darts Championship

Summary

The PDC World Darts Championship, known for sponsorship purposes as the Paddy Power World Darts Championship, organised by the Professional Darts Corporation (PDC), is a World Professional Darts Championship held annually in the sport of darts. The PDC world championship begins in December and ends in January and is held at Alexandra Palace in London and has been held there since 2008. It is the most prestigious of the PDC's tournaments, with the winner receiving the Sid Waddell Trophy, named in honour of the darts commentator Sid Waddell, who died in 2012. Along with the Premier League Darts and World Matchplay, it is considered part of the Triple Crown.

PDC World Darts Championship
The stage at the 2016 edition
Founded1994
First season1994
Organising bodyProfessional Darts Corporation
CountryEngland
Venue(s)Circus Tavern (1994–2007)
Alexandra Palace (since 2008)
Most recent
champion(s)
 Luke Humphries
(2024)
TV partner(s)Sky Sports (1993–)
Tournament formatSets

The PDC championship began in 1994 as the WDC World Darts Championship as one of the consequences of the split in darts, which saw the World Darts Council break away from the BDO. As a result of the settlement between the BDO and the WDC in 1997, the WDC became the PDC, and players were thenceforth free to choose which world championship to enter (but not both in the same year), as long as they met certain eligibility criteria. Both organisations continued to organize their own world championship until the 2020 editions, after which the BDO folded.

There have been twelve different winners since the tournament's inception. With 14 wins from 25 appearances, Phil Taylor has dominated the competition, last winning it in 2013. The other players to win it more than once are John Part (2003 & 2008), Adrian Lewis (2011 & 2012), Gary Anderson (2015 & 2016), Michael van Gerwen (2014, 2017 & 2019) and Peter Wright (2020 & 2022). The one-time winners are the inaugural champion Dennis Priestley (1994), Raymond van Barneveld (2007), Rob Cross (2018), Gerwyn Price (2021), Michael Smith (2023) and Luke Humphries (2024).

History edit

 
A match between Mensur Suljović and Kevin Painter at the 2010 championship

In 1992, some high-profile players, including all previous winners of the BDO World Darts Championship still active in the game, formed the WDC (now PDC), and in 1994, held their first World Championship. Dennis Priestley won the inaugural competition.

The players who broke away were taking a significant gamble – the tournament was broadcast on satellite television rather than terrestrial, and from 1994 to 2001, the prize fund for the players in the WDC/PDC World Championship was lower than the prize fund in the BDO version, although the 1997 PDC World Champion received £45,000 compared to that year's BDO World Champion receiving £38,000. In 2002, the PDC prize fund overtook that of the BDO for the first time, and the PDC event now boasts the largest prize fund of any darts competition. In 2010, the prize fund reached £1 million for the first time, with the World Champion collecting £200,000.

The 2014 and 2015 PDC World Champions collected £250,000 for their respective wins. For the next, winner's share increased to £50,000 each year culminating in a 2018 prize fund of £1.8 million.[1] The current prize fund for the tournament is £2.5 million with £500,000 to the winner, as set since the 2019 edition.

In 2020, the British Darts Organisation — which had held a separate version of the world championship since the split in 1994 — went into liquidation. As a result, the PDC version was briefly the only recognised world championship in darts until the 2022 WDF World Darts Championship was held.

Venue edit

The PDC World Darts Championship has been held at Alexandra Palace in London since 2008, having previously been held at the Circus Tavern in Purfleet, Essex, from 1994 to 2007.[2] Currently, the play takes place inside the venue's West Hall, which has a capacity of 3,200.[3]

List of finals edit

Year Champion (average in final)[4] Score Runner-up (average in final) Prize money Sponsor Venue
Total[5] Champion Runner-up
1994   Dennis Priestley (94.38) 6–1   Phil Taylor (85.62) £64,000 £16,000 £8,000 Skol Circus Tavern,
Purfleet
1995   Phil Taylor (94.11) 6–2   Rod Harrington (87.15) £55,000 £12,000 £6,000 Proton Cars
1996   Phil Taylor (98.52) 6–4   Dennis Priestley (101.48) £62,500 £14,000 £7,000 Vernon's Pools
1997   Phil Taylor (100.92) 6–3   Dennis Priestley (96.78) £99,500 £45,000 £10,000 Red Band
1998   Phil Taylor (103.98) 6–0   Dennis Priestley (90.75) £72,500 £20,000 Skol
1999   Phil Taylor (97.11) 6–2   Peter Manley (93.63) £104,000 £30,000 £16,000
2000   Phil Taylor (94.42) 7–3   Dennis Priestley (91.80) £111,000 £31,000 £16,400
2001   Phil Taylor (107.46) 7–0   John Part (92.58) £125,000 £33,000 £18,000
2002   Phil Taylor (98.47) 7–0   Peter Manley (91.35) £205,000 £50,000 £25,000
2003   John Part (96.87) 7–6   Phil Taylor (99.98) £237,000 Ladbrokes
2004   Phil Taylor (96.03) 7–6   Kevin Painter (90.48) £257,000
2005   Phil Taylor (96.14) 7–4   Mark Dudbridge (90.66) £300,000 £60,000 £30,000
2006   Phil Taylor (106.74) 7–0   Peter Manley (91.72) £500,000 £100,000 £50,000
2007   Raymond van Barneveld (100.93) 7–6   Phil Taylor (100.86)
2008   John Part (92.86) 7–2   Kirk Shepherd (85.10) £589,000 Alexandra Palace,
London
2009   Phil Taylor (110.94) 7–1   Raymond van Barneveld (101.18) £724,000 £125,000 £60,000
2010   Phil Taylor (104.38) 7–3   Simon Whitlock (100.51) £1,000,000 £200,000 £100,000
2011   Adrian Lewis (99.40) 7–5   Gary Anderson (99.41)
2012   Adrian Lewis (93.06) 7–3   Andy Hamilton (90.83)
2013   Phil Taylor (103.04) 7–4   Michael van Gerwen (100.66)
2014   Michael van Gerwen (100.10) 7–4   Peter Wright (95.71) £1,050,000 £250,000
2015   Gary Anderson (97.68) 7–6   Phil Taylor (100.69) £1,250,000 £120,000 William Hill
2016   Gary Anderson (99.26) 7–5   Adrian Lewis (100.23) £1,500,000 £300,000 £150,000
2017   Michael van Gerwen (107.79) 7–3   Gary Anderson (104.93) £1,650,000 £350,000 £160,000
2018   Rob Cross (107.67) 7–2   Phil Taylor (102.26) £1,800,000 £400,000 £170,000
2019   Michael van Gerwen (102.21) 7–3   Michael Smith (95.29) £2,500,000 £500,000 £200,000
2020   Peter Wright (102.79) 7–3   Michael van Gerwen (102.88)
2021   Gerwyn Price (100.08) 7–3   Gary Anderson (94.25)
2022   Peter Wright (98.34) 7–5   Michael Smith (99.22)
2023   Michael Smith (100.71)[6] 7–4   Michael van Gerwen (99.58) Cazoo
2024   Luke Humphries (103.67) 7–4   Luke Littler (101.13) Paddy Power

Records and statistics edit

As of 3 January 2024

Total finalist appearances edit

Rank Player Winner Runner-up Finals Appearances
1   Phil Taylor 14 5 19 25
2   Michael van Gerwen 3 3 6 17
3   Gary Anderson 2 3 5 15
4   Adrian Lewis 2 1 3 18
  John Part 2 1 3 18
  Peter Wright 2 1 3 15
7   Dennis Priestley 1 4 5 19
8   Michael Smith 1 2 3 13
9   Raymond van Barneveld 1 1 2 17
10   Rob Cross 1 0 1 7
  Luke Humphries 1 0 1 7
  Gerwyn Price 1 0 1 10
13   Peter Manley 0 3 3 13
14   Mark Dudbridge 0 1 1 10
  Andy Hamilton 0 1 1 13
  Rod Harrington 0 1 1 10
  Luke Littler 0 1 1 1
  Kevin Painter 0 1 1 17
  Kirk Shepherd 0 1 1 4
  Simon Whitlock 0 1 1 15
  • Active players are shown in bold
  • Only players who reached the final are included
  • In the event of identical records, players are sorted in alphabetical order by family name

Champions by country edit

Country Players Total First title Last title
  England 6 20 1994 2024
  Netherlands 2 4 2007 2019
  Scotland 2 4 2015 2022
  Canada 1 2 2003 2008
  Wales 1 1 2021 2021

Nine-dart finishes edit

Fourteen nine-dart finishes have been thrown at the World Championship. The first one was in 2009.
Two have been made in world finals: firstly by Adrian Lewis in 2011 and then Michael Smith in 2023.

Number Player Year (+ Round) Method Opponent Result
1.   Raymond van Barneveld 2009, Quarter-Final 3 x T20; 3 x T20; T20, T19, D12   Jelle Klaasen Won
2.   Raymond van Barneveld 2010, 2nd Round 3 x T20; 3 x T20; T20, T19, D12   Brendan Dolan Won
3.   Adrian Lewis 2011, Final 3 x T20; 3 x T20; T20, T19, D12   Gary Anderson Won
4.   Dean Winstanley 2013, 2nd Round 3 x T20; 3 x T20; T20, T19, D12   Vincent van der Voort Lost
5.   Michael van Gerwen 2013, Semi-Final 3 x T20; 2 x T20, T19; 2 x T20, D12   James Wade Won
6.   Terry Jenkins 2014, 1st Round 3 x T20; 3 x T20; T20, T19, D12   Per Laursen Lost
7.   Kyle Anderson 2014, 1st Round 3 x T20; 3 x T20; T20, T19, D12   Ian White Lost
8.   Adrian Lewis 2015, 3rd Round 3 x T20; 3 x T20; T20, T19, D12   Raymond van Barneveld Lost
9.   Gary Anderson 2016, Semi-Final 3 x T20; 3 x T20; T20, T19, D12   Jelle Klaasen Won
10.   James Wade 2021, 3rd Round 3 x T20; 3 x T20; T20, T19, D12   Stephen Bunting Lost
11.   William Borland 2022, 1st Round 3 x T20; 2 x T20, T19; 2 x T20, D12   Bradley Brooks Won
12.   Darius Labanauskas 2022, 1st Round T20, 2 x T19; 3 x T20; T20, T17, D18   Mike De Decker Lost
13.   Gerwyn Price 2022, Quarter-Final 3 x T20; 3 x T20; T19, T20, D12   Michael Smith Lost
14.   Michael Smith 2023, Final 3 x T20; 3 x T20; T20, T19, D12   Michael van Gerwen Won

Averages edit

Since the breakaway of the PDC players, there has been much debate about the relative merits of the players within each organisation. The debate often focuses on the three-dart averages of players in matches.

An average over 100 in a match in the PDC World Championship has since been achieved 195 times.[7] This is compared to 21 times in the BDO World Championship, following the 2019 event. In 2010 Phil Taylor became the first player to average over 100 in all six rounds of the tournament. He repeated this feat (though lost the final) in 2015 and Michael van Gerwen achieved it in 2017 and 2019.

An average of over 105 in a match in the PDC World Championship has been achieved 40 times. The highest match average ever in the BDO World Championship is 103.83 by Raymond van Barneveld in his quarter-final victory over John Walton in 2004.

Ten highest PDC World Championship one-match averages[8]
Average Player Year (+Round) Opponent Result
114.05   Michael van Gerwen 2017, Semi-Final   Raymond van Barneveld 6–2
111.21   Phil Taylor 2002, 2nd Round   Shayne Burgess 6–1
110.94   Phil Taylor 2009, Final   Raymond van Barneveld 7–1
109.34   Raymond van Barneveld 2017, Semi-Final   Michael van Gerwen 2–6
109.23   Michael van Gerwen 2016, 2nd Round   Darren Webster 4–0
109.00   Phil Taylor 2007, 2nd Round   Mick McGowan 4–1
108.98   Michael van Gerwen 2021, 2nd Round   Ryan Murray 3–1
108.80   Phil Taylor 2009, Quarter-Final   Co Stompé 5–0
108.74   Luke Humphries 2024, Semi-Final   Scott Williams 6–0
108.65   Michael van Gerwen 2018, 2nd Round   James Wilson 4–0
Five highest losing averages
Average Player Year (+Round) Opponent Result
109.34   Raymond van Barneveld 2017, Semi-Final   Michael van Gerwen 2–6
106.09   Jeffrey de Zwaan 2019, 2nd Round   Rob Cross 1–3
106.07   Cristo Reyes 2017, 2nd Round   Michael van Gerwen 2–4
105.78   Michael van Gerwen 2016, 3rd Round   Raymond van Barneveld 3–4
104.93   Gary Anderson 2017, Final   Michael van Gerwen 3–7
Players with 5 or more 100+ match average
Player Total Highest Av. Year (+Round)
  Phil Taylor 56 111.21 2002, 2nd Round
  Michael van Gerwen 39 114.05 2017, Semi-Final
  Gary Anderson 23 108.39 2011, 3rd Round
  Adrian Lewis 15 106.51 2010, 1st Round
  Peter Wright 15 105.86 2020, Quarter-Final
  Raymond van Barneveld 13 109.34 2017, Semi-Final
  Michael Smith 13 106.32 2022, 2nd Round
  Rob Cross 7 107.67 2018, Final
  Dave Chisnall 7 107.34 2021, Quarter-Final
  Simon Whitlock 7 105.37 2010, Quarter-Final
  Dimitri Van den Bergh 6 105.61 2021, 2nd Round
  Luke Littler 5 106.12 2024, 1st Round
  Gerwyn Price 5 104.20 2020, 3rd Round
Ten highest tournament averages (min 3 matches)
Average Player Year Round (+ result) Reference
106.32   Michael van Gerwen 2017 Final (won) [9]
104.68   Michael van Gerwen 2016 3rd Round [10]
104.63   Phil Taylor 2010 Final (won) [11]
104.19   Adrian Lewis 2010 Quarter-Final [11]
104.08   Phil Taylor 2009 Final (won) [12]
104.05   Michael van Gerwen 2018 Semi-Final [13]
103.64   Michael van Gerwen 2021 Quarter-Final
103.45   Gary Anderson 2017 Final (loss) [9]
103.38   Michael van Gerwen 2019 Final (won) [14]
103.06   Gary Anderson 2011 Final (loss) [15]

Records edit

Most titles: 14, Phil Taylor. Taylor's two BDO titles take his total to 16, a record across both organisations.[16][17]
Most finals: 19, Phil Taylor, 1994–2007, 2009–2010, 2013, 2015 and 2018.[16] Taylor's two BDO finals take his total to 21, a record across both organisations.[16][17]
Most match wins: 110, Phil Taylor, 1994–2018. Taylor has only lost 11 matches at the tournament and reached every final from 1994 until 2007, before being beaten in the quarter-finals by Wayne Mardle in 2008.[18][19][20]
Longest unbeaten run: 44 matches, Phil Taylor, 1995–2003, between his defeats in the 1994 and 2003 finals.
Most 180s in a tournament (total): 914 in 2024.
Most 180s in a tournament (individual): 83, Michael Smith (2022)[21]
Most 180s in a match: 24, Peter Wright (2022 semi-final) and Michael Smith (2022 final) [22][23]
Most 180s in a match (both players): 42, Gary Anderson (22) and Michael van Gerwen (20) (2017 final)
Longest streak of 100+ averages: 19 matches, Michael van Gerwen, 2016–2019[24]
Most appearances: 25, Phil Taylor.
Youngest player: Mitchell Clegg, 16 years and 37 days in 2007. Clegg had qualified as a 15-year-old. He was younger than Michael van Gerwen, who set the BDO World Championship youngest player record a few weeks later.
Youngest finalist: Luke Littler, 16 years and 347 days in the 2024 final. Littler was 4 years and 106 days younger than Kirk Shepherd, who reached the final in 2008.
Record TV audience UK: 3.71 million (2024 final)[25]
Record TV audience outside UK: 2,170,000 (2017 Final). The record was set during the Dutch broadcast (RTL7) of the 2017 final between Dutchman Michael van Gerwen and Gary Anderson.[26] The 2018 final holds the record for highest combined audience in the UK, Netherlands and Germany with over 4.4 million viewers.
Won both World Championships: Four players. Dennis Priestley was the first player to win both versions of the World Championship,[27][28] winning the 1991 BDO Championship and the 1994 PDC Championship. Phil Taylor, John Part and Raymond van Barneveld have since matched the feat.[27][28]
Overseas World Champions: Three players. John Part was the first player from outside the UK to win the PDC World Championship with his 2003 title, followed by Raymond van Barneveld in 2007 and Michael van Gerwen in 2014. Part was also the first overseas player to win the BDO title, doing so in 1994.
Youngest World Champion: Michael van Gerwen was 24 years and 9 months old when he won the title in 2014.
Oldest World Champion: Phil Taylor was 52 years and 5 months old when he won his last world title in 2013.

Media edit

Domestic broadcaster edit

The PDC World Championship has been broadcast live and in its entirety by Sky Sports in the UK since its inception. Since 2009 the tournament has been presented in High Definition (HD). Their coverage is currently presented from a studio overlooking the interior of the Alexandra Palace venue.

The current presenting team is as follows:

Presenters:

  • Emma Paton: (2020–present)
  • Anna Woolhouse: (2022–present)
  • Michael Bridge: (2023–present)

Commentators:

  • Stuart Pyke: (2003–present)
  • Rod Studd: (2009–present)
  • Dan Dawson: (2022–present)

Co-commentators/pundits:

Former presenters and commentators have been:

Overseas broadcasters edit

Dutch broadcaster SBS6, having covered the BDO World Darts Championship for many years, also covered the event until RTL7 took over broadcasting. TV3 Sport (Denmark), Fox Sports (Australia), TSN (Canada), SuperSport (South Africa), Sky Sport (New Zealand), StarHub (Singapore), Ten Sports (India), CCTV (China), Showtime (Middle East), Ukraine TV, TVP Sport (Poland), NOVA Sport (Czech Republic and Slovakia), Sport1 (Germany, Hungary), Meersat (Malaysia), 7TV (Russia), Measat (Indonesia), J Sports (Japan), DAZN (USA, Italy), GOL TV (Spain) Eurosport (Romania), Viaplay (Iceland) and VTM4 (Belgium) now also broadcast the event.

Viewing figures edit

Television viewing figures for the final are as follows: [29]

Year Broadcaster
Sky UK Germany SPORT1 Netherlands
2024 3.68 million peak[30] 2.86 million peak[31]
2023
2,360,000[32]
2022
1,490,000[33]
1,650,000[34]
2021
1,000,000[35]
1,550,000[36]
2020 1,006,553[37] 1,590,000 [38] 1,200,000 (RTL 7)[39]
2019 658,300 1,490,000 [40] 1,540,000 (RTL 7)[41]
2018 1,400,000 2,150,000 [42] 864,000 (RTL 7)
2017 607,000 1,480,000[43] 2,170,000 (RTL 7)[26]
2016 908,000 950,000[44] 869,000 (RTL 7)[45]
2015 1.5 million peak[46] 1,360,000[47] 908,000 (RTL 7)[48]
2014 668,000 560,000[49] 2,054,000 (RTL 7)
2013 1,270,000[50] 810,000 1,748,000 (RTL 7)
2012 728,000 762,000 (RTL 7)
2011 920,000 435,000 (SBS6)
2010 888,000 730,000 854,000 (SBS6)
2009 809,000 490,000 1,441,000 (SBS6)
2008 731,000 340,000 211,000 (compilation SBS6)
2007 1,028,000 1,339,000 (SBS6)
2006 761,000
2005 530,000
2004 820,000
2003 610,000
2002 Unavailable
2001 420,000
2000 240,000
1999 200,000

Webcasting edit

The PDC world championship events are now broadcast on www.livepdc.tv which shows the events live, highlights and also classic matches. This website is a subscription only viewing and is limited to certain territorial restrictions.

Video games edit

The PDC have worked with various video game developers since 2006 to create a number of darts-themed titles based on the World Darts Championship tournament.

Their first game PDC World Championship Darts was developed by Mere Mortals for the PlayStation 2 and PC. The second game in the series was PDC World Championship Darts 2008 developed by Mere Mortals for the PlayStation 2, PC, PlayStation Portable, Wii and Xbox 360. A year later Rebellion Developments took over development of the series, releasing PDC World Championship Darts 2009 for the Wii and Nintendo DS.

The most recent PDC World Darts Championship console game to be released was PDC World Championship Darts Pro Tour a darts video game for the PlayStation 3, Wii and Xbox 360. This game is the most comprehensive of the series featuring ten professional players and five official PDC tournaments including the PDC World Grand Prix, Las Vegas Desert Classic, PDC UK Open and the Holland Open.

In 2021 the PDC collaborated with Blueprint Gaming to develop PDC World Darts Championship, an officially licensed slots game available to play on mobile devices and PC, the game was released in February 2021.[51]

edit

The tournament has been sponsored by bookmaker Paddy Power in 2024. Previous sponsors have been:

Trophy edit

Following popular darts commentator Sid Waddell's death on 11 August 2012, the decision was made to rename the champion's trophy to the Sid Waddell trophy from the 2013 tournament onwards.[52]

Notes and references edit

  1. ^ Gratton, Aaron. "Hearn Announces World Championship Shake Up". Tungsten Tickle. Archived from the original on 29 May 2016. Retrieved 8 July 2015.
  2. ^ "PDC championship moves to London". BBC Sport. 2 April 2007. Retrieved 2 April 2007.
  3. ^ "New four-year deal keeps William Hill World Darts Championship at Ally Pally > Alexandra Palace". Alexandra Palace. 29 July 2021. Retrieved 4 January 2023.
  4. ^ Each player's average score is based on the average for each 3-dart visit to the board (ie total points scored divided by darts thrown and multiplied by 3)
  5. ^ PDC World Championship prize fund dartsdatabase
  6. ^ "Michael Smith hits nine-darter on way past Van Gerwen to PDC world title". The Guardian. 4 January 2023. Retrieved 4 January 2023.
  7. ^ "PDC World Championship Player Stats – The best winning averages recorded in this tournament". dartsdatabase.co.uk. Retrieved 9 January 2022.
  8. ^ dartsdatabase.co.uk; best winning averages
  9. ^ a b "2017 PDC World Championship tournament averages". Darts Database. Retrieved 24 November 2018.
  10. ^ "2016 PDC World Championship tournament averages". Darts Database. Retrieved 24 November 2018.
  11. ^ a b "2010 PDC World Championship tournament averages". Retrieved 24 November 2018.
  12. ^ "2009 PDC World Championship tournament averages". Darts Database. Retrieved 24 November 2018.
  13. ^ "2018 PDC World Championship tournament averages". Darts Database. Retrieved 24 November 2018.
  14. ^ "2019 PDC World Championship tournament averages". Darts Database. Retrieved 16 January 2019.
  15. ^ "2011 PDC World Championship tournament averages". Darts Database. Retrieved 24 November 2018.
  16. ^ a b c "PDC World Championship Records". dartsdatabase.co.uk. Retrieved 9 January 2022.
  17. ^ a b "PDC World Championship Player Stats – The best winning averages recorded in this tournament". dartsdatabase.co.uk. Retrieved 9 January 2022.
  18. ^ "PDC WC Match wins page 1". Darts Database. Retrieved 14 January 2015.
  19. ^ "PDC WC match wins page 2". Darts Database. Retrieved 14 January 2015.
  20. ^ "PDC WC match wins page 3". Darts Database. Retrieved 14 January 2015.
  21. ^ "PDC World Championship Player Stats – Most 180's in a tournament". dartsdatabse.co.uk. Retrieved 9 January 2022.
  22. ^ "Darts – WORLD: PDC World Championship – Semi-finals". flashscore.co.uk. 2 January 2022. Retrieved 9 January 2022.
  23. ^ Murphy, Chris. "Record-breaking Wright and super Smith seal final spots". PDC. Retrieved 3 January 2022.
  24. ^ "Van Gerwen: 'I Handled The Pressure'". PDC. Retrieved 9 January 2022.
  25. ^ "World darts final: Peak audience of 3.7m people watch Luke Humphries beat Luke Littler in PDC final". BBC Sport. 4 January 2024. Retrieved 4 January 2024.
  26. ^ a b "Kijkonderzoek". kijkonderzoek.nl. Retrieved 3 January 2017.
  27. ^ a b "PDC World Championship Winners". dartsdatabase.co.uk. Retrieved 9 January 2022.
  28. ^ a b "BDO World Championship Winners". dartsdatabase.co.uk. Retrieved 9 January 2022.
  29. ^ BARB viewing figures Archived 2007-10-16 at the Wayback Machine
  30. ^ Bower, Aaron (4 January 2024). "Luke Littler fast-tracked into darts' Premier League after record TV figures". The Guardian. ISSN 0261-3077. Retrieved 5 January 2024.
  31. ^ MarketScreener (4 January 2024). "TV ratings: Darts World Championship is a viewer magnet -January 04, 2024 at 06:01 am EST | MarketScreener". www.marketscreener.com. Retrieved 5 January 2024.
  32. ^ "Sport1 audience peaks at 2.4m for dramatic World Darts Championship final". SportBusiness. 4 January 2023. Retrieved 4 January 2023.
  33. ^ "Audience of nearly 1.5m watched PDC World Darts Championship final on Sky Sports". Dartsnews.com. 4 January 2022. Retrieved 4 January 2023.
  34. ^ Thursday, Jo Ruddock; January 27; Story, 2022-14:28 Print This. "Sport1 extends darts co-operation with DAZN until 2026". SVG Europe. Retrieved 4 January 2023.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: numeric names: authors list (link)
  35. ^ "PDC World Championship achieves record-breaking viewing figures". Dartsnews.com. 22 January 2021. Retrieved 4 January 2023.
  36. ^ "Darts-WM: Über zwei Millionen Zuschauer sehen Price-Sieg bei Sport1". SPORT1 (in German). Retrieved 4 January 2023.
  37. ^ "Weekly top programmes on four screens (28 days) – Sky Sport Main Event=511,000 – Sky Sports Darts=495,553". BARB.
  38. ^ SPORT1 (2 January 2020). "Peter Wrights erster Weltmeistertitel beschert SPORT1 zweitbeste Darts-Übertragung seiner Geschichte: 1,59 Millionen Zuschauer im Schnitt und 2,22 Millionen Zuschauer in der Spitze verfolgen Finale der diesjährigen Darts-WM". sport1.de (in German).{{cite news}}: CS1 maint: numeric names: authors list (link)
  39. ^ "Netherlands viewing figures 1 January 2020". kijkonderzoek.nl (in Dutch). Archived from the original on 3 January 2020. Retrieved 3 January 2020.
  40. ^ SPORT1 (2 January 2019). "Darts-WM 2019: Rekord-Quote für SPORT1 bei Finale mit van Gerwen". sport1.de (in German).{{cite news}}: CS1 maint: numeric names: authors list (link)
  41. ^ BuzzE/NU.nl (2 January 2019). "1,54 miljoen Nederlandse kijkers voor WK-finale darts". nu.nl (in Dutch).
  42. ^ SPORT1 (2 January 2018). "Darts-WM 2018: Finale mit Phil Taylor beschert SPORT1 Rekordquote". sport1.de (in German).{{cite news}}: CS1 maint: numeric names: authors list (link)
  43. ^ Niemaier, Timo (3 January 2017). "Darts-WM: Neuer Quotenrekord für Sport1 zum Finale – DWDL.de". DWDL.de (in German). Retrieved 18 December 2017.
  44. ^ Sülter, Björn (4 January 2016). "SportCheck: Darts-Rekorde, Insel-Showdown & Schanzenfieber". Quotenmeter (in German). Retrieved 18 December 2017.
  45. ^ "Darts WK 2016" (PNG). kroegsportnaareenhogerlevel.files.wordpress.com. Retrieved 16 December 2017.
  46. ^ "Gary Anderson's PDC World Darts win pulls in viewers for Sky Sports". Digital Spy. 5 January 2015. Retrieved 9 January 2022.
  47. ^ "Der große Wurf: Darts-Finale führt Sport1 zu Allzeit-Rekord". quotenmeter.de (in German). 5 January 2015. Retrieved 9 January 2022.
  48. ^ Kijkonderzoek. Retrieved on 2015-01-05.
  49. ^ DWDL: Darts-WM: Sport1 katapultiert sich vor Vox
  50. ^ BARB. BARB. Retrieved on 2013-08-13.
  51. ^ "Blueprint and PDC team up to release World Darts Championship Slot". nowagering.com. Retrieved 25 May 2021.
  52. ^ "World Darts Trophy Named After Waddell". Sky News. 13 August 2012. Retrieved 13 August 2013.

External links edit

  • World Championship page on the PDC website