2022 Interwetten German Darts Grand Prix Day Two

European Tour

Michael van Gerwen and Rob Cross will clash in a stellar third round tie at the Interwetten German Darts Grand Prix on Monday.

2022 Interwetten German Darts Grand Prix Day One

European Tour

Max Hopp and Martin Schindler delighted the Munich crowd on day one of the Interwetten German Darts Grand Prix

2022 Interwetten German Darts Grand Prix draw & schedule

European Tour

Tthe draw and schedule of play for the year's third PDC European Tour event has been confirmed.

Further European Tour East Europe & Host Nation Qualifiers confirmed

European Tour

Details have been confirmed for the East Europe Qualifiers for European Tour Events 6-9 and the Host Nation Qualifier for two events.

Interwetten European Darts Grand Prix moves to Stuttgart

European Tour

The Interwetten European Darts Grand Prix in May has been moved to the Hans-Martin-Schleyer-Halle in Stuttgart.

ET6, ET7 Tour Card Holder Qualifiers confirmed

European Tour

Tour Card Holder Qualifiers for European Tour Events 6 and 7 took place on Friday at the Barnsley Metrodome.

European Tour qualifying HNQ & AMQ treble-header confirmed

European Tour

Three days of Host Nation Qualifiers and Associate Member Qualifiers for the PDC European Tour will be held in Hildesheim from April 22-24.

European Tour 6-7 seeds & qualifier entries confirmed

European Tour

Seeded players have been confirmed for European Tour Events Six and Seven, along with player entries for qualifiers.

ET4, ET5 Tour Card Holder Qualifiers

European Tour

Tour Card Holder Qualifiers for two European Tour events took place in Barnsley on Friday.

Players Championships 5-6 entries & European Tour 4-5 seeds confirmed

ProTour

Player entries have been confirmed for Players Championship events 5-6, along with European Tour seeds.

The European Tour sees three-day tournaments held at venues across Europe.

Held from February-October, European Tour events feature 48 players, made up of PDC Tour Card Holders, Associate Member Qualifiers and Host Nation Qualifiers.

Prize money won in European Tour events counts towards the PDC Order of Merit, ProTour Order of Merit and European Tour Order of Merit.

All European Tour events are streamed live through Viaplay in the UK, the Netherlands, Poland and all Nordic & Baltic countries, and through DAZN for viewers in Germany, Austria and Switzerland.

Coverage will also be shown on PDCTV (excluding Germany, Austria and Switzerland) and through bookmakers worldwide.

NB: From the original entries, Gary Anderson, Josh Rock, Michael Smith and Nathan Aspinall have withdrawn and are replaced from the Reserve List by Stephen Burton, Dylan Slevin, Mensur Suljovic and Robert Owen.

Click here for European Tour ticket information.

2024 NEO.bet German Darts Championship
August 30-September 1, Halle 39, Hildesheim
Draw Bracket

(1) Dave Chisnall v Raymond van Barneveld/Dom Taylor
(16) Joe Cullen v Jose de Sousa/Max Hopp
(8) Martin Schindler v Mensur Suljovic/Dimitri Van den Bergh
(9) Chris Dobey v Mickey Mansell/Matthias Ehlers
(4) Danny Noppert v Brendan Dolan/Dirk van Duijvenbode
(13) Michael van Gerwen v Maik Kuivenhoven/James Wade
(5) Stephen Bunting v Peter Wright/Niko Springer
(12) Gian van Veen v Krzysztof Kciuk/Robert Owen
(2) Gerwyn Price v Dragutin Horvat/Krzysztof Ratajski
(15) Daryl Gurney v Boris Krcmar/Stephen Burton
(7) Ross Smith v Nick Kenny/Jelle Klaasen
(10) Ricardo Pietreczko v Callan Rydz/Simon Whitlock
(3) Damon Heta v Ritchie Edhouse/Luke Woodhouse
(14) Ryan Joyce v Johan Engstrom/Andrew Gilding
(6) Ryan Searle v Martin Lukeman/Jonny Clayton
(11) Luke Littler v Dylan Slevin/Steve Beaton

Schedule of Play
Friday August 30
First Round
Afternoon Session

Nick Kenny 6-3 Jelle Klaasen
Robert Owen 6-3 Krzysztof Kciuk
Mickey Mansell 6-2 Matthias Ehlers
Andrew Gilding 6-4 Johan Engstrom
Dylan Slevin 6-4 Steve Beaton
Stephen Burton 6-4 Boris Krcmar
Krzysztof Ratajski 6-3 Dragutin Horvat
Dirk van Duijvenbode 6-2 Brendan Dolan

Evening Session
Ritchie Edhouse 6-5 Luke Woodhouse
Max Hopp 6-2 Jose De Sousa
James Wade 6-3 Maik Kuivenhoven
Dom Taylor 6-2 Raymond van Barneveld
Peter Wright 6-4 Niko Springer
Jonny Clayton 6-5 Martin Lukeman
Simon Whitlock 6-4 Callan Rydz
Mensur Suljovic 6-2 Dimitri Van den Bergh

Saturday August 31
Second Round
Afternoon Session

Gian van Veen 6-3 Robert Owen
Andrew Gilding 6-3 Ryan Joyce
Daryl Gurney 6-1 Stephen Burton
Chris Dobey 6-2 Mickey Mansell
Nick Kenny 6-5 Ross Smith
Danny Noppert 6-4 Dirk van Duijvenbode
Ryan Searle 6-4 Jonny Clayton
Damon Heta 6-2 Ritchie Edhouse

Evening Session
Dave Chisnall 6-3 Dom Taylor
Joe Cullen 6-4 Max Hopp
Krzysztof Ratajski 6-5 Gerwyn Price
Michael van Gerwen 6-2 James Wade
Martin Schindler 6-4 Mensur Suljovic
Ricardo Pietreczko 6-3 Simon Whitlock
Peter Wright 6-5 Stephen Bunting
Luke Littler 6-0 Dylan Slevin

Sunday September 1
Afternoon Session

Third Round
Dave Chisnall 6-0 Joe Cullen
Martin Schindler 6-4 Chris Dobey
Michael van Gerwen 6-2 Danny Noppert
Peter Wright 6-4 Gian van Veen
Daryl Gurney 6-2 Krzysztof Ratajski
Nick Kenny 6-5 Ricardo Pietreczko
Damon Heta 6-4 Andrew Gilding
Luke Littler 6-2 Ryan Searle

Evening Session
Quarter-Finals
Dave Chisnall 6-5 Martin Schindler
Peter Wright 6-4 Michael van Gerwen
Daryl Gurney 6-3 Nick Kenny
Luke Littler 6-5 Damon Heta

Semi-Finals
Peter Wright 7-5 Dave Chisnall
Luke Littler 7-2 Daryl Gurney

Final
Peter Wright 8-5 Luke Littler

Peter Wright celebrated a stunning return to winning ways on an extraordinary night in Hildesheim, defeating a record-breaking Luke Littler 8-5 in Sunday's NEO.bet German Darts Championship final.

An emotional Wright defied the odds to topple Littler in one of the most remarkable European Tour finals of all-time, having trailed 5-2 in Sunday’s showpiece at Halle 39.

Teenage sensation Littler averaged 106.87 and hit ten 180s in a compelling contest, but it wasn’t enough to triumph, as Wright reeled off six successive legs to claim his second German Darts Championship crown.

Littler had made an ominous start to proceedings, recording legs of 11, 14 and 13 darts to lead 3-0 with a 118 average.

Wright showed signs of life with a clinical 110 kill in leg six after Littler had squandered two darts for a 5-1 lead, only for the 17-year-old to regain his cushion with a 12-dart leg in leg seven.

However, a sensational 146 checkout in leg eight turned the tide for Wright, as he capitalised on missed opportunities from Littler in three straight legs to establish an unlikely 6-5 lead.

Littler then missed double 15 for a spectacular 150 checkout in leg 12 as Wright pinned double one to move to the cusp of victory, before the Scot capped off a famous triumph with an 11-darter on tops.

“I just kept believing in myself,” reflected Wright, who defied a ten-point gap in the averages to lift his ninth European Tour title – a record only bettered by Michael van Gerwen.

“Luke is a fantastic dart player and he was blowing me off the board with 180s, but I thought if I could keep with him, I might get back into it.

“This means a lot to me. Luke is distraught because he wants to win. He’s a fighter, he’s a winner, and he’ll be back and beating us all again soon!”


Wright followed up an opening round win over Niko Springer with a thrilling second round win against Stephen Bunting on Saturday, as the Masters champion crashed out with a 103 average.

The Scot then backed up a gruelling 6-4 success against Gian van Veen with victory over Van Gerwen by the same scoreline in an epic quarter-final, averaging 108.90 to overturn a 4-2 deficit.

This set up a semi-final showdown against top seed Dave Chisnall, where Wright maintained his revival by pinning seven of his 12 attempts at double to move through to his first final of 2024.

Littler, meanwhile, was unable to add to his wins in Wieze and Graz, despite crashing in 31 maximums across the weekend – a new European Tour record.

The Warrington wonderkid kicked off his title bid with a six-leg blitz of Dylan Slevin on Saturday, before winning through a scrappy affair against Ryan Searle to reach the last eight.

The Premier League champion then fought back from 4-1 down to deny Damon Heta in a dramatic quarter-final, while he proved too strong for Daryl Gurney in the last four, averaging 107 and hitting eight 180s to advance to a meeting with Wright.

“Peter just wouldn’t go away,” conceded Littler, who was eyeing an eighth PDC title of 2024.

“I threw at my best, Peter threw at his best at the end, but maybe the game would have changed if I hit that 150 [checkout].

“Fair play to Peter. He’s played well all weekend, so I’ve got to take it on the chin.”


Chisnall defeated Wright to win the German Darts Championship in 2013, although he was unable to repeat the feat as he missed out on back-to-back European Tour titles.

The 43-year-old opened Sunday’s action with a six-leg whitewash of Joe Cullen, before defying a heroic fightback from Martin Schindler in a breathless quarter-final.

2019 champion Gurney also impressed in progressing to his first big stage semi-final of 2024, registering back-to-back ton-plus averages in wins over Krzysztof Ratajski and Nick Kenny on Finals Day.

Kenny ended the hopes of reigning champion Ricardo Pietreczko in reaching his maiden European Tour quarter-final, having also dumped out Ross Smith in Saturday’s second round.

Three-time winner Van Gerwen averaged 102 in his last 16 demolition of World Cup partner Danny Noppert, although a 104 average wasn’t enough to topple an inspired Wright in the last eight.

Heta defeated a spirited Andrew Gilding in his run to the quarter-finals, while Schindler secured another big stage victory against Chris Dobey to reach his sixth European Tour quarter-final of the season.