World Series of Darts Finals

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World Series of Darts Finals
Tournament information
VenueAFAS Live
LocationAmsterdam
Country Netherlands
Established2015
Organisation(s)PDC
FormatLegs
Prize fund£300,000 (2019)
Month(s) PlayedNovember (2015–19)
September (2020)
October (2021)
Current champion(s)
Wales Jonny Clayton

The World Series of Darts Finals is a non-ranking darts tournament held by the Professional Darts Corporation. It is classed as a PDC premier event. The tournament was held annually in November, but in 2020, it moved to September, and will move to October in 2021. The first three events were held in the Braehead Arena in Glasgow, Scotland, moved to the Multiversum Schwechat, Vienna, Austria for 2018, and moved to the AFAS Live, Amsterdam, Netherlands in 2019. In 2020, it returned to Austria, in the Salzburgarena, Salzburg, before its return to Amsterdam in 2021.

The playing field includes the top eight of the World Series of Darts ranking, and a further 16 players, which are a mix of invited players by the PDC and qualifiers.

History[]

The World Series of Darts began in 2013. The goal of these series of tournaments is to make darts more popular across the globe.

Two World Series tournaments were held in the first year: the Dubai Duty Free Darts Masters and the Sydney Darts Masters. In 2014, events in Singapore and Perth were added to the series, followed by Japan (Yokohama, then Tokyo in 2016) and Auckland in 2015, Shanghai in 2016, and the USA (Las Vegas) Melbourne and Germany (Düsseldorf) in 2017. Brisbane was added to the roster in 2018, and Gelsenkirchen replaced Düsseldorf for the German Masters. In 2019, the German Masters again moved, this time to Cologne, and the Auckland Masters became the New Zealand Darts Masters, and was relocated to Hamilton.

The best 8 players from the World Series Darts tournaments qualified for the finals tournament, which was inaugurated in 2015. This ranking is formed by the points that the player earns in the World Series tournament.

Stage points[]

The distribution of the points in each World Series tournament is:

Round Points
Winner 12
Runner-up 8
Semi-final 5
Quarter-final 3
First round 1

Finals[]

Year Winner Legs Runner-up Prize money Sponsor Location
Total Champion Runner-up
2015 Netherlands Michael van Gerwen (106.60) 11–10 Scotland Peter Wright (106.40) £155,000 £30,000 £15,000 Unibet Scotland Braehead Arena, Glasgow
2016 Netherlands Michael van Gerwen (101.18) 11–9 Scotland Peter Wright (99.63) Ladbrokes
2017 Netherlands Michael van Gerwen (103.30) 11–6 Scotland Gary Anderson (100.68) £250,000 £50,000 £25,000
2018 England James Wade (97.00) 11–10 England Michael Smith (99.09) bwin Austria Multiversum Schwechat, Vienna
2019 Netherlands Michael van Gerwen (96.76) 11–2 Netherlands Danny Noppert (89.37) £300,000 £70,000 £30,000 Jack's Casino Netherlands AFAS Live, Amsterdam
2020 Wales Gerwyn Price (96.21) 11–9 England Rob Cross (94.22) bwin Austria Salzburgarena, Salzburg
2021 Wales Jonny Clayton (101.63) 11–6 Belgium Dimitri Van den Bergh (101.95) Jack's Casino Netherlands AFAS Live, Amsterdam

Statistics[]

Finalist appearances
As of 31 October 2021.
Rank Player Won Runner-up Finals Appearances
1 Netherlands Michael van Gerwen 4 0 4 7
2 England James Wade 1 0 1 7
Wales Gerwyn Price 1 0 1 6
Wales Jonny Clayton 1 0 1 3
5 Scotland Peter Wright 0 2 2 7
6 Scotland Gary Anderson 0 1 1 6
England Michael Smith 0 1 1 7
Netherlands Danny Noppert 0 1 1 2
England Rob Cross 0 1 1 4
Belgium Dimitri Van den Bergh 0 1 1 5

High averages[]

Ten highest World Series of Darts Finals one-match averages
Average Player Year (+ Round) Opponent Result
115.62 England Mervyn King 2021, First round England James Wade 6–0
112.94 England Dave Chisnall 2016, Second round Belgium Kim Huybrechts 6–4
109.82 Wales Jamie Lewis 2018, First round Belgium Dimitri Van den Bergh 6–2
109.71 Netherlands Michael van Gerwen 2016, Quarter-finals Australia Simon Whitlock 10–0
108.83 Netherlands Michael van Gerwen 2017, Quarter-finals England Rob Cross 10–4
108.69 Netherlands Michael van Gerwen 2016, Semi-finals England Dave Chisnall 11–3
108.10 Scotland Peter Wright 2020, Semi-finals Wales Gerwyn Price 6–11
108.00 Netherlands Michael van Gerwen 2015, Semi-finals England Adrian Lewis 11–5
107.34 England Phil Taylor 2016, Semi-finals Scotland Peter Wright 10–11
106.60 Netherlands Michael van Gerwen 2015, Final Scotland Peter Wright 11–10
Five highest World Series of Darts Finals losing averages
Average Player Year (+ Round) Opponent Result
108.10 Scotland Peter Wright 2020, Semi-finals Wales Gerwyn Price 6–11
107.34 England Phil Taylor 2016, Semi-finals Scotland Peter Wright 10–11
106.40 Scotland Peter Wright 2015, Final Netherlands Michael van Gerwen 10–11
104.10 England Phil Taylor 2015, Semi-finals Scotland Peter Wright 9–11
103.59 Belgium Kim Huybrechts 2016, Second round England Dave Chisnall 4–6
Netherlands Michael van Gerwen 2018, Quarter-finals Netherlands Raymond van Barneveld 8–10
Different players with a 100+ match average (Updated 31/10/21)
Player Total Highest Av. Year (+ Round)
Netherlands Michael van Gerwen 16 109.71 2016, Quarter-Final
Scotland Peter Wright 7 108.10 2020, Semi-Final
Belgium Dimitri Van den Bergh 6 105.21 2018, Last 32
England Dave Chisnall 5 112.94 2016, Last 16
England Phil Taylor 5 107.34 2016, Quarter-Final
Wales Gerwyn Price 5 102.48 2020, Quarter-Final
Northern Ireland Daryl Gurney 3 103.64 2017, Last 16
Belgium Kim Huybrechts 3 103.59 2016, Last 16
Scotland Gary Anderson 3 103.57 2017, Last 16
England Nathan Aspinall 3 103.37 2019, Last 32
England Adrian Lewis 2 105.19 2015, Quarter-Final
England Michael Smith 2 103.98 2018, Last 16
Netherlands Raymond van Barneveld 2 103.49 2015, Quarter-Final
Austria Mensur Suljović 2 102.64 2020, Last 32
England Glen Durrant 2 102.50 2020, Last 16
Wales Jonny Clayton 2 101.63 2021, Final
England Mervyn King 1 115.62 2021, Last 32
Wales Jamie Lewis 1 109.82 2018, Last 32
Poland Krzysztof Ratajski 1 104.19 2019, Last 32
Portugal José de Sousa 1 103.86 2021, Last 32
England James Wade 1 103.66 2015, Last 16
Australia Kyle Anderson 1 101.35 2018, Last 32
England Terry Jenkins 1 100.68 2015, Quarter-Final
Germany Gabriel Clemens 1 100.60 2019, Last 32
Wales Mark Webster 1 100.16 2015, Last 32

References[]

External links[]

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