2009 World Grand Prix (darts) explained

Tournament Name:2009 Skybet World Grand Prix
Dates:5–11 October 2009
Venue:Citywest Hotel
Location:Dublin
Organisation:PDC
Format:Sets
"double in, double out"
Final – best of 11
Prize Fund:£350,000
Winners Share:£100,000
Winner: Phil Taylor
Prev:2008
Next:2010

The 2009 Skybet World Grand Prix was the twelfth instance of the darts tournament held by the Professional Darts Corporation, the World Grand Prix. It was held from 5–11 October 2009. It was staged at the Citywest Hotel in Dublin, Ireland.[1] The event featured a tournament record prize fund of £350,000 with £100,000 going to the winner.

Phil Taylor successfully defended his title, beating Raymond van Barneveld 6-3 in the final to win the World Grand Prix for the ninth time.

Format

The tournament's usual format was in play with the usual 501 legs double-in double-out format (the World Grand Prix remains the only televised darts tournament to use the double-in format). The first round's games were best of 3 sets - the quickfire nature of this round means shocks are frequent in this round, not least involving eight-time champion Phil Taylor who, three times, has gone out in the first round here. Second round games were best of 5 sets, the quarter-finals best of 7 sets, the semi-finals best of 9 sets, and the final was best of 11 sets. All sets were best of 5 legs/first to three legs.[2]

Prize money

A tournament record prize fund of £350,000 was available to the participants, divided based on the following performances:

Position (num. of players)Prize money
(Total: £350,000)
Winneralign=center (1)align=center £100,000
Runner-Upalign=center (1)align=center £40,000
Semi-finalistsalign=center (2)align=center £20,000
Quarter-finalistsalign=center (4)align=center £12,500
Second round losersalign=center (8)align=center £7,000
First round losersalign=center (16)align=center £4,000

Qualification

The field of 32 players was mostly made up from the top 16 players in the PDC Order of Merit on September 7, following the two Players Championship events in Salzburg, Austria. The top 8 from these rankings were also the seeded players. The remaining 16 places went to the top 12 non-qualified players from the 2009 Players Championship Order of Merit, and then to the top 4 non-qualified residents of the Republic of Ireland and Northern Ireland from the 2009 Players Championship Order of Merit who have competed in at least six Players Championship events.[3]

PDC Top 16

  1. Phil Taylor (winner)
  1. James Wade (first round)
  1. Raymond van Barneveld (runner-up)
  1. John Part (first round)
  1. Terry Jenkins (semi-finals)
  1. Ronnie Baxter (first round)
  1. Mervyn King (second round)
  1. Adrian Lewis (quarter-finals)
  1. Colin Lloyd (second round)
  1. Dennis Priestley (second round)
  1. Alan Tabern (first round)
  1. Colin Osborne (first round)
  1. Mark Walsh (first round)
  1. Wayne Mardle (first round)
  1. Kevin Painter (quarter-finals)
  1. Andy Hamilton (semi-finals)

PDPA Players Championship qualifiers

  1. Gary Anderson (second round)
  1. Robert Thornton (first round)
  1. Jamie Caven (first round)
  1. Steve Beaton (second round)
  1. Wayne Jones (second round)
  1. Andy Smith (quarter-finals)
  1. Vincent van der Voort (first round)
  1. Mark Dudbridge (second round)
  1. Michael van Gerwen (first round)
  1. Paul Nicholson (first round)
  1. Wes Newton (second round)
  1. Denis Ovens (first round)

Irish qualifiers

  1. Brendan Dolan (first round)
  1. John MaGowan (first round)
  1. Mick McGowan (first round)
  1. Jacko Barry (quarter-finals)

Statistics

PlayerPlayedSets WonSets LostLegs WonLegs LostLWAT100+140+180sHigh Checkout3-dart Average
Phil Taylor5205683621143882816498.62
James Wade11267217947692.17
Gary Anderson2431713840181210091.34
Colin Lloyd243171364523315691.13
Adrian Lewis35625241062251316789.77
Mark Dudbridge234151453315138889.61
Andy Hamilton411742341592421114988.60
Wes Newton243181353619614188.44
Terry Jenkins4116393215103491711688.39
Dennis Priestley234121634521412588.04
Mark Walsh11268223908487.55
Wayne Jones224111433518211487.48
Raymond van Barneveld51711595917149582413087.41
John Part1022628517986.44
Brendan Dolan1022608525586.01
Jamie Caven1022617516585.55
Mervyn King2238133191447684.86
Vincent van der Voort112773226213684.59
Andy Smith35723302559251210584.25
Denis Ovens11247114146683.76
Paul Nicholson112581154412082.92
John Magowan102161124110082.44
Kevin Painter36525211035351314081.98
Colin Osborne10246211717881.60
Alan Tabern11266117819281.56
Michael van Gerwen10236111515079.23
Steve Beaton243151253315414178.67
Jacko Barry35622257632449278.01
Robert Thornton1021608317274.41
Ronnie Baxter10216011114073.97
Mick McGowan10246211703872.33
Wayne Mardle1022616514869.63

Television coverage and sponsorship

As usual and since its inception the tournament was screened by Sky Sports.

The tournament was sponsored for the last time by Sky Bet after five years.

External links

Notes and References

  1. http://www.pdc.tv/page/GrandPrixDetail/0,,10180~1790581,00.html Venue Boost For World Grand Prix
  2. http://www.pdc.tv/page/GrandPrixDetail/0,,10180~1799196,00.html Skybet World Grand Prix Schedule of Play
  3. News: Skybet World Grand Prix Field. Planet Darts. September 7, 2009. January 21, 2012. https://web.archive.org/web/20091126174458/http://www.pdc.tv/page/GrandPrixDetail/0,,10180~1790276,00.html. November 26, 2009. dead.