2019 International Darts Open Day Two

European Tour

Gerwyn Price began his bid to retain the International Darts Open title in Riesa with a brilliant second round win.

2019 International Darts Open Day One

European Tour

Kyle Anderson and John Henderson were among the players to make it through to the second day of the International Darts Open.

2019 International Darts Open: Draw and schedule

European Tour

Check out the draw for the 2019 International Darts Open.

Rankings update after PC23-24

News

Dave Chisnall has risen to 11th on the PDC Order of Merit following Players Championships 23-24.

2019 ET13 entries confirmed

European Tour

Cullen: 'I knew I was going to win'

European Tour

Joe Cullen explained there was no doubt in his mind that he was going to win the European Darts Matchplay.

2020 PDC Calendar confirmed

News

The 2020 Professional Darts Corporation calendar has been confirmed.

Super Cullen claims maiden European Tour title

European Tour

Joe Cullen claimed his maiden European Tour title in the European Darts Matchplay in Mannheim.

2019 European Darts Matchplay Day Two

European Tour

Michael van Gerwen & Mensur Suljovic were amongst the European Darts Matchplay second round winners.

2019 European Darts Matchplay Day One

European Tour

Kim Huybrechts and Michael Smith were among the players to make it through to the second day of the European Darts Matchplay

Schedule of Play
Friday September 26
Round One
Afternoon Session

Callan Rydz 6-1 Connor Scutt
Niels Zonneveld 6-3 Dalibor Smolik
Krzysztof Ratajski 6-0 Owen Bates
Cor Dekker 6-3 Andrew Gilding
Ryan Joyce 6-0 Rocco Fulciniti
Luke Woodhouse 6-5 Lukas Wenig
Ricardo Pietreczko 6-3 Oskar Lukasiak
Mensur Suljovic 6-2 Martin Lukeman

Evening Session
Chris Landman 6-3 Denis Schnetzer
Ritchie Edhouse 6-5 Wessel Nijman
Raymond van Barneveld 6-3 Ansh Sood
Richard Veenstra 6-5 Niko Springer
Jermaine Wattimena 6-1 Stefan Bellmont
Dirk van Duijvenbode 6-2 Jitse van der Wal
Nathan Aspinall 6-0 Andreas Toft Jorgensen
William O’Connor 6-1 Daryl Gurney

Saturday September 27
Round Two
Afternoon Session

Ryan Searle 6-3 Niels Zonneveld
Luke Woodhouse 6-2 Dave Chisnall
Cor Dekker 6-3 Peter Wright
Krzysztof Ratajski 6-5 Mike De Decker
Rob Cross 6-2 Richard Veenstra
Gian van Veen 6-0 Dirk van Duijvenbode
Danny Noppert 6-5 William O’Connor
Ritchie Edhouse Bye (Ross Smith withdrawn)

Evening Session
Ryan Joyce 6-5 James Wade
Martin Schindler 6-2 Ricardo Pietreczko
Jermaine Wattimena 6-1 Josh Rock
Luke Humphries 6-2 Callan Rydz
Jonny Clayton 6-4 Nathan Aspinall
Raymond van Barneveld 6-5 Damon Heta
Stephen Bunting 6-3 Chris Landman
Chris Dobey 6-4 Mensur Suljovic

Sunday September 28
Afternoon Session

Round Three
Ryan Searle 6-4 Luke Humphries
Luke Woodhouse 6-2 Jermaine Wattimena
Jonny Clayton 6-3 Martin Schindler
Cor Dekker 6-5 Chris Dobey
Stephen Bunting 6-3 Krzysztof Ratajski
Raymond van Barneveld 6-0 Ritchie Edhouse
Gian van Veen 6-2 Ryan Joyce
Rob Cross 6-5 Danny Noppert

Evening Session
Quarter-Finals
Luke Woodhouse 6-5 Ryan Searle
Cor Dekker 6-5 Jonny Clayton
Stephen Bunting 6-2 Raymond van Barneveld
Gian van Veen 6-2 Rob Cross

Semi-Finals
Luke Woodhouse 7-3 Cor Dekker
Stephen Bunting 7-6 Gian van Veen

Final
Stephen Bunting 8-3 Luke Woodhouse

Stephen Bunting claimed his second European Tour title of the year at the Swiss Darts Trophy following a convincing 8-3 victory over Luke Woodhouse in Sunday’s final.

Bunting claimed his sixth title of the season in Basel with an exemplary display over first-time finalist Woodhouse, in game which saw the Liverpudlian average almost 104.

After missing six darts at double in the opening leg, Bunting never looked back and raced into a 3-1 lead before Woodhouse stopped the rot with a hold of throw on double nine.

However, Woodhouse could not live with the world number four, who responded immediately with an 11-darter en route to a comfortable victory at St. Jakobshalle.

“There’s a lot of hard work that goes on behind the scenes,” said Bunting, who averaged more than 100 in all four matches on Finals Day.

“I’m playing the best darts of my life. I feel consistently that I'm delivering. I'm so happy with this win, it means a lot.

“Luke’s had a fantastic week, there’s no better time to be playing your best darts. This will give him a lot of confidence going into future tournaments.”

Bunting kicked off Sunday with a 6-3 victory over Krzysztof Ratajski before brushing aside Dutch icon Raymond van Barneveld in the last eight.

The former Masters champion then edged a thriller with Gian van Veen in the semi-finals, surviving a match dart to break in the deciding leg after the young Dutchman fought back from 4-0 down.

“I'm number four in the world. The rankings are over a few years so it shows how consistent I’ve been, but you can’t take anything for granted in this game,” Bunting continued.

“There’s so many good players in this world and to be in the top four in the world is an unbelievable achievement.

“I can’t take my foot off the gas, I need to keep on the practice board and keep improving. Hopefully there’s a big tournament coming soon.”

Woodhouse reached only his second PDC final after a stand-out display of doubling across Sunday’s action.

After dispatching a wasteful Jermaine Wattimena, the 36-year-old profited from a missed match dart from last year’s finalist Ryan Searle in squeezing through into the final four.

In the semi-finals, Woodhouse ended Cor Dekker’s best-ever European Tour run, hitting 70 per cent of his darts at the outer ring en route to a 7-3 success over the Norwegian.

“He scored so heavily and proved why he’s where he is in the world,” reflected Woodhouse.

"He kept me under the cosh from the start and I just could not get close to him.

“It’s all positive for me now. Just getting to a final is a massive achievement and I’d have taken it at the start of the weekend.

“I’m hoping now this can be the start of something I can really push on to and take this into the ProTours and into the rest of the year.

“I’m more than capable of playing against any player. I’ve beaten all the top players. Hopefully this year, a first title comes.”

Dekker’s record run came after edging past Chris Dobey and Jonny Clayton in last-leg deciders, which included a 127 match-winning checkout against Dobey - in spite of a 107 average from the Englishman.

World Youth Champion Van Veen’s route to the semi-finals saw him see off Ryan Joyce and Rob Cross, in what was a first European Tour quarter-final of the year for Voltage.

Earlier in the day, world number one Luke Humphries lost out to Searle, while Martin Schindler’s title defence was ended by a clinical Clayton, despite a ton-plus average from the German number one.

Van Barneveld whitewashed Ritchie Edhouse in the last 16 to confirm his spot at the World Grand Prix in Leicester at the expense of Dave Chisnall, with Edhouse now unable to qualify for and defend his European Championship crown.

Following the weekend’s action in Basel, the Winamax European Tour concludes with the Elten Safety Shoes German Darts Championship (ET14) next month, where Peter Wright will aim to defend his title in Hildesheim from October 17-19.