2018 World Matchplay Explained

Tournament Name:2018 BetVictor World Matchplay
Dates:21–29 July 2018
Venue:Winter Gardens
Location:Blackpool, England
Organisation:Professional Darts Corporation (PDC)
Format:Legs
Prize Fund:£500,000
Winners Share:£115,000
Nine Dart: Gary Anderson(quarter-finals)
Winner: Gary Anderson
Prev:2017
Next:2019

The 2018 BetVictor World Matchplay was the 25th annual staging of the World Matchplay, organised by the Professional Darts Corporation. The tournament took place at the Winter Gardens, Blackpool, from 21–29 July 2018.

Phil Taylor was the defending champion, after defeating Peter Wright 18–8 in the 2017 final to claim his 16th World Matchplay title, but he retired following the 2018 PDC World Darts Championship final. For the first time, the winner of the tournament, (Gary Anderson) received the Phil Taylor Trophy, which was renamed in his honour in January 2018.[1]

Gary Anderson hit a nine dart finish in the fourth leg of his quarter-final match against Joe Cullen, which was the seventh nine-dart finish in the World Matchplay and the first since 2014. Anderson overcame Cullen 19–17, facing two match darts against him at 14–15 scoreline.

Anderson went on to win his first World Matchplay title, defeating Mensur Suljović, 21–19 after extra time in the longest final in the tournament's history.[2]

The first round match between Kim Huybrechts and John Henderson made a piece of World Matchplay history, as it was the first time that a match was won by a single leg since the 1997 3rd place play-off. Huybrechts won the match 13–12 in a sudden-death leg, the first time the rule had been needed since it was introduced in 2013.

For the first time in World Matchplay history, no Englishmen progressed into the semi-finals, resulting in a first Matchplay final without an English player.

Prize money

The prize fund remained at £500,000, with the winner's earnings being £115,000. Gary Anderson received £45,000 for hitting a nine-dart finish in his quarter-final against Joe Cullen.

Position (no. of players)Prize money
(Total: £500,000)
Winneralign=center (1)align=center £115,000
Runner-upalign=center (1)align=center £55,000
Semi-finalistsalign=center (2)align=center £30,000
Quarter-finalistsalign=center (4)align=center £17,500
Second roundalign=center (8)align=center £11,000
First roundalign=center (16)align=center £7,000
Nine-dart finishalign=center (1)align=center £45,000

Format

In previous stagings of the event all games had to be won by two clear legs with no sudden-death legs. However, after consulting the host broadcaster Sky Sports in 2013, the PDC decided that games will now only proceed for a maximum of six extra legs before a tie-break leg is required. For example, in a best of 19 legs first round match, if the score reaches 12–12 then the 25th leg will be the decider.

Qualification

The top 16 players on the PDC Order of Merit as of 2 July 2018 were seeded for the tournament. The top 16 players on the ProTour Order of Merit not to have already qualified were unseeded.

The following players qualified for the tournament:

PDC Order of Merit Top 16

  1. Michael van Gerwen (first round)
  2. Peter Wright (semi-finals)
  3. Rob Cross (second round)
  4. Gary Anderson (champion)
  5. Daryl Gurney (second round)
  6. Mensur Suljović (runner-up)
  7. Simon Whitlock (quarter-finals)
  8. Dave Chisnall (quarter-finals)
  9. Michael Smith (second round)
  10. James Wade (second round)
  11. Ian White (second round)
  12. Gerwyn Price (first round)
  13. Raymond van Barneveld (second round)
  14. Darren Webster (quarter-finals)
  15. Kim Huybrechts (second round)
  16. Adrian Lewis (second round)

PDC ProTour qualifiers

  1. Jonny Clayton (first round)
  2. Joe Cullen (quarter-finals)
  3. Stephen Bunting (first round)
  4. Max Hopp (first round)
  5. Mervyn King (first round)
  6. Jermaine Wattimena (first round)
  7. Steve West (first round)
  8. Steve Beaton (first round)
  9. Kyle Anderson (first round)
  10. James Wilson (first round)
  11. John Henderson (first round)
  12. Keegan Brown (first round)
  13. Jelle Klaasen (first round)
  14. Steve Lennon (first round)
  15. Jeffrey de Zwaan (semi-finals)
  16. Richard North (first round)

Statistics

PlayerEliminatedPlayedLegs WonLegs Lost100+140+180sHigh checkout3-dart averageCheckout success
Gary AndersonWinner5152100.8836.45%
Mensur SuljovićFinal515197.1640.56%
414099.1242.86%
Peter WrightSemi-finals417088.6837.14%
Dave Chisnall314899.0547.06%
Simon WhitlockQuarter-finals313296.1438.46%
Darren WebsterQuarter-finals313895.7041.67%
Joe CullenQuarter-finals317095.2641.46%
Adrian LewisSecond round2121103.8640.91%
Rob Cross215698.8127.59%
Michael SmithSecond round211098.1140.00%
Kim HuybrechtsSecond round215696.1633.33%
Second round213095.2969.23%
Ian WhiteSecond round215493.5150.00%
James WadeSecond round214990.8824.14%
Daryl GurneySecond round210087.6925.00%
1610168610097.8835.29%
Mervyn KingFirst round151015957291.8541.67%
Steve WestFirst round110122318610891.7931.25%
John HendersonFirst round112133013311491.0052.17%
Steve LennonFirst round16102410212491.0037.50%
Steve BeatonFirst round16102411112090.9246.15%
Kyle AndersonFirst round161014959090.6933.33%
Max HoppFirst round1710231618090.5146.67%
Gerwyn PriceFirst round13108559990.2323.08%
James WilsonFirst round1810191228687.7244.44%
Jermaine WattimenaFirst round110122416111387.6329.41%
Stephen BuntingFirst round1710811311086.2146.67%
Jelle KlaasenFirst round151013714084.3631.25%
Jonny ClaytonFirst round1610158315484.0654.55%
Richard NorthFirst round121081018080.4050.00%
Keegan BrownFirst round1410143110976.6233.33%

Notes and References

  1. Web site: World Matchplay: Phil Taylor beats Peter Wright to win 16th title. 31 July 2017. BBC Sport. 31 July 2017.
  2. Web site: World Matchplay: Gary Anderson wins thrilling final. PDC. 29 July 2018.