Littler lights up Graz with superb Heta victory

European Tour

Luke Littler produced a blistering burst to storm through to the last 16 of the NEO.bet Austrian Darts Open on Saturday, as Jonny Clayton made a superb start to his title defence in Graz.

Inspired Schindler creates history on Day One in Graz

European Tour

Martin Schindler produced an imperious display to take centre stage on the opening day of the NEO.bet Austrian Darts Open on Friday.

2024 NEO.bet Austrian Darts Open draw & schedule

European Tour

Jonny Clayton will begin his defence of the NEO.bet Austrian Darts Open against Chris Dobey or Graham Hall on Saturday, with the draw and schedule for this weekend's event now confirmed.

Anderson hails 'good fortune' after Euro Tour success in Sindelfingen

European Tour

Gary Anderson claimed he’s ‘never been so lucky’ after ending his ten-year wait for a European Tour title in Sindelfingen on Sunday.

Anderson ends ten-year wait for European Tour title

European Tour

Gary Anderson ended his ten-year wait for a European Tour title in Sindelfingen on Sunday, defeating Ross Smith 8-6 in the final of the NEO.bet European Darts Grand Prix.

Humphries halts Littler streak on sensational day in Sindelfingen

European Tour

Luke Humphries returned to winning ways against Luke Littler on an extraordinary second day of action at the NEO.bet European Darts Grand Prix.

Spectacular Schindler steals the show on Day One in Sindelfingen

European Tour

Martin Schindler began his bid for back-to-back European Tour titles with a sensational first round display at the NEO.bet European Darts Grand Prix on Friday, as Luke Littler also impressed on Day One in Sindelfingen.

2024 NEO.bet European Darts Grand Prix draw & schedule

European Tour

Rob Cross will begin his defence of the NEO.bet European Darts Grand Prix against Martin Schindler or Gian van Veen, with Luke Humphries and Luke Littler poised to renew their rivalry in Sindelfingen.

Paul Nicholson: Examining the rise of Martin Schindler

Comment

From steward on the European Tour to European Tour champion. Sounds like a fantasy, but in modern day darts, it’s the place where dreams can actually come true.

Schindler crowned new German number one following Euro Tour success

News

Martin Schindler moved up to a career-high of world number 22 following his landmark victory at last weekend's NEO.bet International Darts Open.

The PDC, in conjunction with PDC Europe, will stage a series of 13 European Tour events throughout 2019.

Each tournament is worth £140,000 in prize money, and features 48 players who qualify as follows, with all tournaments broadcast online to PDCTV-HD Subscribers and are also streamed through a series of bookmakers' websites.

2019 European Darts Matchplay
Tournament Draw Bracket - Second Round Onwards 

(1) Michael van Gerwen v Michael Smith/Steve Lennon
(16) Mensur Suljovic v Robert Thornton/Kim Huybrechts
(8) Adrian Lewis v Dirk van Duijvenbode/Krzysztof Kciuk
(9) Krzysztof Ratajski v Keegan Brown/Simon Whitlock
(5) Daryl Gurney v John Henderson/Ryan Joyce
(12) Rob Cross v Dennis Nilsson/Marvin Wehder
(4) Dave Chisnall v Ryan Meikle/Brett Claydon
(13) Ricky Evans v Maik Kuivenhoven/Karsten Koch
(2) Ian White v Gabriel Clemens/Steffen Siepmann
(15) Jonny Clayton v Scott Taylor/Matthew Edgar
(7) James Wade v Bradley Brooks/Mark McGeeney
(10) Nathan Aspinall v Jeffrey de Zwaan/Wayne Jones
(6) Peter Wright v Max Hopp/William O'Connor
(11) Joe Cullen v Jamie Hughes/Wesley Plaisier
(3) Gerwyn Price v Florian Hempel/Simon Stevenson
(14) Glen Durrant v Cody Harris/Ross Smith

Schedule of Play
Friday September 6
First Round
Afternoon Session (1300 local time, 1200 BST)  
  
Scott Taylor 6-5 Matthew Edgar
Bradley Brooks 6-4 Mark McGeeney
Ryan Meikle 6-3 Brett Claydon
Marvin Wehder 6-3 Dennis Nilsson
Cody Harris 6-4 Ross Smith
Dirk van Duijvenbode 6-5 Krzysztof Kciuk
John Henderson 6-3 Ryan Joyce
Gabriel Clemens 6-2 Steffen Siepmann

Evening Session (1915 local time, 1815 BST)
Simon Stevenson 6-3 Florian Hempel
Jamie Hughes 6-5 Wesley Plaisier
Keegan Brown 6-3 Simon Whitlock
Karsten Koch 6-3 Maik Kuivenhoven
Kim Huybrechts 6-5 Robert Thornton
Michael Smith 6-3 Steve Lennon
William O'Connor 6-5 Max Hopp
Wayne Jones 6-4 Jeffrey de Zwaan

Saturday September 7
Second Round
Afternoon Session (1300 local time, 1200 BST)

Dave Chisnall 6-2 Ryan Meikle
Jonny Clayton 6-4 Scott Taylor
James Wade 6-2 Bradley Brooks
Adrian Lewis 6-2 Dirk van Duijvenbode
Glen Durrant 6-3 Cody Harris
Daryl Gurney 6-4 John Henderson
Gerwyn Price 6-3 Simon Stevenson
Rob Cross 6-0 Marvin Wedher

Evening Session (1915 local time, 1815 BST)
Ricky Evans 6-3 Karsten Koch
Ian White 6-3 Gabriel Clemens
Krzysztof Ratajski 6-5 Keegan Brown
Michael van Gerwen 6-2 Michael Smith
Mensur Suljovic 6-1 Kim Huybrechts
William O'Connor 6-5 Peter Wright
Wayne Jones 6-3 Nathan Aspinall 
Joe Cullen 6-3 Jamie Hughes

Sunday September 8
Afternoon Session (1300 local time, 1200 BST)

Third Round
Michael van Gerwen 6-4 Mensur Suljovic
Krzysztof Ratajski 6-5 Adrian Lewis
Rob Cross 6-4 Daryl Gurney
Dave Chisnall 6-1 Ricky Evans
Jonny Clayton 6-5 Ian White
James Wade 6-5 Wayne Jones
Joe Cullen 6-3 William O'Connor
Glen Durrant 6-3 Gerwyn Price

Evening Session (1915 local time, 1815 BST)
Quarter-Finals

Michael van Gerwen 6-5 Krzysztof Ratajski
Dave Chisnall 6-5 Rob Cross
James Wade 6-4 Jonny Clayton
Joe Cullen 6-2 Glen Durrant

Semi-Finals
Michael van Gerwen 7-1 Dave Chisnall
Joe Cullen 7-5 James Wade

Final
Joe Cullen 8-5 Michael van Gerwen

Sunday’s games played in Draw Bracket order

Joe Cullen claimed his maiden European Tour title with a sensational performance to defeat Michael van Gerwen 8-5 in the European Darts Matchplay final in Mannheim on Sunday night.

The Bradford ace claimed the third ranking title of his career in brilliant fashion as he overcame World Champion Van Gerwen with a clinical and confident showing.

Having never previously won past the semi-finals on the European Tour, Cullen saw off William O'Connor, Glen Durrant and James Wade on Sunday to book his spot in the decider at the Maimarkthalle.

He showed no nerves against the World Champion, opening the final with a 180 and claiming four of the opening five legs to move 4-1 up, including a 14-darter to break throw.

Van Gerwen responded in the sixth, only to see Cullen power home a 170 checkout to bring the German crowd to their feet as he opened up a 5-2 lead.

Van Gerwen showed his class with three legs in a row to level the final, but Cullen regained the edge with success 13-darters to lead 7-5 - punishing misses from the Dutchman to break - before an 88 finish for a 14-darter secured the £25,000 title.

Joe Cullen (PDC Europe)

"To beat Michael in the final is amazing," said Cullen, who averaged over 101 in the final. "It's the biggest moment in my career, it's great.

"Michael is the consummate professional, he's so gracious in defeat and victory. Me and Michael are good friends and he congratulated me wholeheartedly.

"It was just one of those weekends. For us mere mortals, we're not Michael, the stage is where we all play really well or play really bad and Michael has set the standard.

"I've been threatening to win a tournament for a while and this weekend I believed I was going to win it. It genuinely believed it. I couldn't see that anyone could beat me today."

A four-time European Tour winner in 2019, Van Gerwen saw his bid to add further honours ended in the final for a second successive week, having lost out to Mensur Suljovic in the Austrian Darts Championship last Sunday.

Van Gerwen had avenged that loss by seeing off Suljovic 6-4 in the third round, before edging out Krzysztof Ratajski in the quarter-finals and then storming past Dave Chisnall with a 7-1 semi-final win.

Michael van Gerwen (PDC Europe)

"If you lose any final you can only blame yourself," said Van Gerwen. "I missed a few chances but Joe played a phenomenal tournament.

"Normally he's very laconic but today he beat some phenomenal players, also myself in the final, and fair play to him. I have to take this on the chin and move forward."

Wade survived a missed match dart against Wayne Jones in the third round before seeing off Jonny Clayton 6-4 in the quarter-finals, but lost out in his bid for a second European Darts Matchplay title to Cullen.

Chisnall, June's Danish Darts Open winner, saw his hopes of a second European Tour title of the year ended in crushing style by Van Gerwen in the last four after he had seen off Ricky Evans and Rob Cross on the day.

Durrant averaged 110 in an outstanding 6-3 third round win over Gerwyn Price earlier on Sunday, while Ratajski survived a missed match dart from Adrian Lewis in their last 16 tie.

Cullen’s success sees him move back into the world’s top 16 as he jumps three places to 15th following the Mannheim triumph.

Ratajski moves up four places to 27th, while Evans and Durrant continued their progress towards the top 32 with their runs over the weekend.

The PDC European Tour continues from September 13-15 with the International Darts Open in Riesa, with coverage to be streamed through PDCTV-HD at video.pdc.tv and bookmakers' websites worldwide. Tickets are available through www.pdc-europe.tv/tickets.

Third Round Round-Up

Michael van Gerwen avenged last Sunday's defeat to Mensur Suljovic in the Austrian Darts Championship final with a superb 6-4 win to open the third round action.

World Champion Van Gerwen reeled off three straight legs from 3-2 down to move 5-3 up before sealing his spot in the last eight to remain on course for a fifth European Tour title of 2019.

The Dutchman now meets Krzysztof Ratajski, who survived one missed match dart as Adrian Lewis wired the bull for a 167 finish in the deciding leg of their 11-leg contest.

Ratajski led 4-0 and 5-2 before Lewis hit back to level, but the two-time World Champion was agonisingly left to rue his missed bull as the Polish ace progressed.

World number two Rob Cross maintained his winning record against Daryl Gurney with a 6-4 victory from their tie, finishing six doubles from 13 attempts.

Cross now plays Dave Chisnall, after the Danish Darts Open winner produced a strong display in a 6-1 win over Ricky Evans.

Jonny Clayton defied four ton-plus finishes from Ian White, who came from 5-2 down to take their tie into a decider only to see the Welshman prevail and move into the last eight.

Clayton now plays 2016 European Darts Matchplay winner James Wade, who survived a missed match dart from Wayne Jones before edging a 6-5 win of his own.

Jones led 2-0 before five straight legs put Wade in command, only for the former European Championship finalist to hit back and take the game all the way.

Joe Cullen landed a ten-darter as he came from 2-0 down to defeat William O'Connor 6-3, setting up a quarter-final tie with Glen Durrant.

Durrant was the third round's most impressive performer with a huge 110 average in his 6-3 win over Gerwyn Price, who averaged 106 in reply.

Durrant finished six doubles from seven attempts in a superb performance, landing checkouts of 107 and 117 as well as other winning legs of 12, 13 and 14 darts.