2019 German Darts Open Explained

Tournament Name:2019 German Darts Open
Dates:26–28 April 2019
Venue:Saarlandhalle
Location:Saarbrücken
Organisation:PDC
Format:Legs
Prize Fund:£140,000
Winners Share:£25,000
Nine Dart: Steve Beaton
High Checkout:167 Steve Beaton
Winner: Michael van Gerwen
Prev:Event 3
Next:Event 5

The 2019 German Darts Open was the fourth of thirteen PDC European Tour events on the 2019 PDC Pro Tour. The tournament took place at Saarlandhalle, Saarbrücken, Germany, from 26 to 28 April 2019. It featured a field of 48 players and £140,000 in prize money, with £25,000 going to the winner.

Max Hopp was the defending champion after defeating Michael Smith 8–7 in the final of the 2018 tournament, but he was defeated 6–3 by John Henderson in the second round.

Steve Beaton hit the third nine-dart finish of the 2019 European Tour during his first round match with Kirk Shepherd.

Brendan Dolan averaged 105.54 in his first round defeat to Jamie Hughes, a European Tour record for a first round losing average.

Michael van Gerwen won his 31st European Tour title, defeating Ian White 8–3 in the final.

Prize money

This is how the prize money is divided:[1]

Stage (num. of players)Prize money
Winneralign=center (1)align=center £25,000
Runner-upalign=center (1)align=center £10,000
Semi-finalistsalign=center (2)align=center £6,500
Quarter-finalistsalign=center (4)align=center £5,000
Third round losersalign=center (8)align=center £3,000
Second round losersalign=center (16)align=center £2,000*
First round losersalign=center (16)align=center £1,000
Totalalign=center colspan=2 £140,000

Qualification and format

The top 16 entrants from the PDC ProTour Order of Merit on 5 March will automatically qualify for the event and will be seeded in the second round.

The remaining 32 places will go to players from six qualifying events – 18 from the UK Tour Card Holder Qualifier (held on 15 March), six from the European Tour Card Holder Qualifier (held on 15 March), two from the West & South European Associate Member Qualifier (held on 19 April), four from the Host Nation Qualifier (held on 25 April), one from the Nordic & Baltic Associate Member Qualifier (held on 1 February) and one from the East European Associate Member Qualifier (held on 20 January).

From 2019, the Host Nation, Nordic & Baltic and East European Qualifiers will only be available to non-tour card holders. Any tour card holders from the applicable regions will have to play the main European Qualifier.

The following players will take part in the tournament:

Top 16

  1. Michael van Gerwen (champion)
  2. Ian White (runner-up)
  3. Gerwyn Price (quarter-finals)
  4. Peter Wright (third round)
  5. Mensur Suljović (quarter-finals)
  6. Rob Cross (semi-finals)
  7. Adrian Lewis (quarter-finals)
  8. James Wade (third round)
  9. Jonny Clayton (second round)
  10. Max Hopp (second round)
  11. Joe Cullen (third round)
  12. Daryl Gurney (third round)
  13. Dave Chisnall (semi-finals)
  14. Simon Whitlock (second round)
  15. Darren Webster (third round)
  16. Jermaine Wattimena (second round)

UK Qualifier

European Qualifier

West/South European Qualifier

Host Nation Qualifier

Nordic & Baltic Qualifier

East European Qualifier

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Allen . Dave . Prize Money Soars Above £14m In 2019 . . 15 January 2019.
  2. Web site: Magnussen . Mads Plagborg . Baltic dominance on the Pro Tour . PDC Nordic & Baltic . 4 February 2019 . 13 February 2019 . https://web.archive.org/web/20190213191638/http://pdc-nordic.tv/2019/02/04/baltic-dominance-on-the-pro-tour/ . dead .