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PDC World Cup of Darts


FieldValue
tournament_namePDC World Cup of Darts
imagePDC World Cup logo.png
establishment2010
organisationPDC
formatPairs event
prizefund£450,000
month_playedDecember (2010)
February (2012–13)
November (2020)
September (2021)
June (2014–19; 2022–)
final year
Current Champion**** (2025)
Final Champion

February (2012–13) November (2020) September (2021) June (2014–19; 2022–) The PDC World Cup of Darts is a team darts tournament organised by the Professional Darts Corporation, and was one of the three new tournaments introduced into the PDC calendar in 2010. It is broadcast live by Sky Sports.

The first edition was held in 2010 but due to the rescheduling of the Players Championship Finals in the PDC calendar, the second edition was played in Hamburg, Germany, in February 2012. In 2015, the event took place the Eissporthalle Frankfurt, where it stayed until returning to Hamburg in 2019 when it moved to the Barclaycard Arena. In 2020, the event was held at the Salzburgarena in Salzburg, Austria, and in 2021, it returned to Germany, this time in the Sparkassen-Arena, Jena, and in 2022 it returned to Frankfurt were it has been held since.

The competition succeeded the Jocky Wilson Cup; a one-off international match between England and Scotland held in Glasgow on 5 December 2009. England defeated Scotland by 6 points to 0.

Background

In October 2009, PDC chairman Barry Hearn announced his intention to buy the British Darts Organisation and inject £2 million into amateur darts, but the BDO decided not to accept the offer. In a statement, Hearn stated "The aim of our offer to the BDO was to unify the sport of darts and this remains our long-term objective despite the decision by the BDO County Associations" The Jocky Wilson Cup was held in December.

But following the BDO's rejection, the PDC went on to arrange three brand new tournaments for 2010 to help the development of youth and women's darts: the PDC Under-21 World Championship, the PDC Women's World Championship, and the PDC World Cup of Darts.

Format

In the first 3 competitions (held in 2010, 2012 and 2013), the participating teams were the top 24 countries in the PDC Order of Merit at the end of October after the 2010 World Grand Prix. Each nation's top ranked player was then joined by the second highest player of that country. For seeding, the average rank of both was used.

The top 8 nations automatically started in the second round (last 16). The other 16 nations played in the first round. Matches were best of 11 legs in doubles, and the losing team threw first in the next leg. The winners of the first round played the top eight ranked teams in the second round, also in best of 11 doubles.

In 2010, the winners of the second round were drawn into two groups of four (A & B). Each team played each other once (three matches per team). Each match consisted of two singles and one doubles – all over best of five legs. 1 point was awarded for a singles win, and 2 points for a doubles win, with all points counting towards the overall league table. The top two teams in each group advanced to the semi-finals.

The semi-finals consisted of four singles games and one doubles game (if required) per match – all over best of 11 legs. Again, 1 point was awarded for a singles win, and 2 points for a doubles win. If the match score is 3–3 at the end of the games, then a sudden-death doubles leg would decide who goes through to the final.

The final was the same format as the semi-final, but each game was best of 15 legs.

In 2012, the first round format remained the same, with the exception being that the matches were best of 9 doubles. The second round had games where each match consisted of two singles and one doubles – over best of seven legs in singles, and best of 9 legs in doubles. As before, 1 point was awarded for a singles win, and 2 points for a doubles win. If the score was tied 2–2, then a sudden death doubles leg took place to determine the winner. The format was the same for the quarter-finals, with the exception that the doubles matches were best of 7 legs, like the singles.

In the semi-finals, games had each match consisting of four singles and one doubles match – over best of seven legs. As before, 1 point was awarded for a singles win, and 2 points for a doubles win. If the score was tied 3–3, then a sudden death doubles leg took place to determine the winner. In the final, the match consisted of four singles and one doubles match – over best of 13 legs. As before, 1 point was awarded for a singles win, and 2 points for a doubles win. If the score was tied 3–3, then a sudden death doubles leg took place to determine the winner.

In 2013, a new format was created. The 24 teams were put into groups of 3, which each contained one of the top 8 seeds, plus two other teams. The teams played each other in best of 9 doubles matches, with the top 2 in each group progressing to the last 16. The last 16 also used the same best of 9 doubles format.

In the quarter-finals onwards, the matches began with two best of 7 leg singles matches. If one team won both singles matches, they were declared the winner, if each team won one match each, a best of 7 doubles match would decide the winner. In the final, there would be four best of 7 leg singles matches (if needed), with a point for each win, with a 7 leg doubles decider, if the singles matches ended making the score 2–2.

In 2014 and 2015, the field extended to 32 teams, with the top 16 teams being seeded, and each playing a best of 9 doubles match to begin. After that, the format was the same as the later stages of the previous tournament with two best of 7 leg singles matches. If one team won both singles matches, they were declared the winner, if each team won one match each, a best of 7 doubles match would decide the winner. In the final, there would be four best of 7 leg singles matches (if needed), with a point for each win, with a 7 leg doubles decider, if the singles matches ended making the score 2–2. In 2015, the final was tweaked, so that the doubles match would be the third match.

The format remained the same until 2023, with the only major change being in 2016, when only the top 8 teams were seeded, rather than the top 16.

In March 2023, the PDC announced a completely revamped format for the following tournament set to happen between 15–18 June 2023. This new format consisted of 40 different nations for the first time in the events history and a group stage for the first time since 2013. 12 groups of 3 countries were drawn, with the winner of each group advancing into the second round, while the top four ranked countries automatically advance into the second round. This format also consisted of doubles throughout the competition for the first time.

Results by year

#YearWinnersScoreRunners-upVenuePrize money (team)SponsorsPlayersTeamTeamPlayersTotalWinnersRunners-up
12010Raymond van Barneveld
Co Stompé4–2 (p)Mark Webster
Barrie BatesRainton Meadows Arena
, Houghton-le-Spring£150,000£40,000£20,000Cash Converters
22012Phil Taylor
Adrian Lewis4–3 (p)Simon Whitlock
Paul NicholsonAlsterdorfer Sporthalle
, Hamburg
32013Phil Taylor
Adrian Lewis3–1 (m)Kim Huybrechts
Ronny HuybrechtsBetfair
42014Michael van Gerwen
Raymond van Barneveld3–0 (m)Phil Taylor
Adrian Lewis£200,000Bwin
52015Phil Taylor
Adrian Lewis3–2 (m)Gary Anderson
Peter WrightEissporthalle
, Frankfurt£250,000£50,000£26,000
62016Phil Taylor
Adrian Lewis3–2 (m)Michael van Gerwen
Raymond van BarneveldBetway
72017Michael van Gerwen
Raymond van Barneveld3–1 (m)Mark Webster
Gerwyn Price£300,000£60,000£32,000
82018Michael van Gerwen
Raymond van Barneveld3–1 (m)Gary Anderson
Peter Wright
92019Gary Anderson
Peter Wright3–1 (m)Steve Lennon
William O'ConnorBarclaycard Arena
, Hamburg£350,000£70,000£40,000BetVictor
102020Gerwyn Price
Jonny Clayton3–0 (m)Michael Smith
Rob CrossSalzburgarena
, Salzburg
112021Peter Wright
John Henderson3–1 (m)Mensur Suljović
Rowby-John RodriguezSparkassen-Arena
, JenaCazoo
122022Damon Heta
Simon Whitlock3–1 (m)Gerwyn Price
Jonny ClaytonEissporthalle
, Frankfurt
132023Gerwyn Price
Jonny Clayton10–2 (l)Peter Wright
Gary Anderson£450,000£80,000£50,000My Diesel Claim
142024Luke Humphries
Michael Smith10–6 (l)Mensur Suljović
Rowby-John RodriguezBetVictor
152025Josh Rock
Daryl Gurney10–9 (l)Gerwyn Price
Jonny Clayton

Records and statistics

Individual appearances

As of the 2025 tournament, only 3 players have played in all 16 editions of the World Cup of Darts.

They are:

  • IRL William O'Connor
  • AUT Mensur Suljović
  • AUS Simon Whitlock

Total finalist appearances

Country

CountryChampionsRunners-upFinalsAppearances
ENG England52716
41516
WAL Wales24616
SCO Scotland23516
AUS Australia11216
10116
AUT Austria02216
BEL Belgium01116
IRL Ireland01116
  • In the event of identical records, countries are first sorted by date first achieved

Team

PlayersTeamWonRunner-upFinalsAppearances
Phil Taylor and Adrian Lewis4156
Michael van Gerwen and Raymond van Barneveld3146
Gerwyn Price and Jonny Clayton2247
Gary Anderson and Peter Wright1348
Raymond van Barneveld and Co Stompé1011
Peter Wright and John Henderson1012
Damon Heta and Simon Whitlock1016
Luke Humphries and Michael Smith1011
Josh Rock and Daryl Gurney1011
Mensur Suljović and Rowby-John Rodriguez0229
Mark Webster and Barrie Bates0111
Simon Whitlock and Paul Nicholson0115
Kim Huybrechts and Ronny Huybrechts0115
Mark Webster and Gerwyn Price0112
Steve Lennon and William O'Connor0115
Michael Smith and Rob Cross0113
  • In the event of identical records, teams are first sorted by date first achieved

Player

PlayerTeamWonRunner-upFinalsAppearances
Adrian Lewis4156
Phil Taylor4156
Raymond van Barneveld4158
Michael van Gerwen31411
Peter Wright23511
Gerwyn Price23510
Jonny Clayton2249
Gary Anderson13411
Simon Whitlock11215
Michael Smith1125
Co Stompé1011
John Henderson1013
Damon Heta1016
Luke Humphries1012
Daryl Gurney1019
Josh Rock1012
Mark Webster0227
Rowby-John Rodriguez0229
Mensur Suljović02215
Barrie Bates0111
Paul Nicholson0115
Kim Huybrechts01113
Ronny Huybrechts0115
Steve Lennon0115
William O'Connor01115
Rob Cross0114
  • Active players are shown in bold
  • Only players who reached the final are included
  • In the event of identical records, players are first sorted by date first achieved, and second in alphabetical order by family name

High averages

Team

Ten highest World Cup of Darts one-match team averagesAverageTeamYear (+ Round)OpponentsResult (legs)
118.10 (WR)Krzysztof Ratajski and Krzysztof Kciuk2023, Group StageDarius Labanauskas and Mindaugas Barauskas4–1
117.88Michael van Gerwen and Raymond van Barneveld2014, Semi-finalsBrendan Dolan and Mickey Mansell4–0
111.33Michael van Gerwen and Raymond van Barneveld2017, Second roundDarin Young and Larry Butler4–0
109.33Michael van Gerwen and Raymond van Barneveld2017, First roundKarel Sedláček and František Humpula5–1
109.31Damon Heta and Simon Whitlock2022, Quarter-finalsDimitri Van den Bergh and Kim Huybrechts4–0
108.41Simon Whitlock and Paul Nicholson2010, Group stageJohn Part and Ken MacNeil3–1
107.77Michael van Gerwen and Raymond van Barneveld2016, Quarter-finalsSimon Whitlock and Kyle Anderson4–3
105.48Kim Huybrechts and Ronny Huybrechts2013, Semi-finalsJani Haavisto and Jarkko Komula4–0
105.17Michael van Gerwen and Raymond van Barneveld2017, Quarter-finalsMax Hopp and Martin Schindler4–1
104.97Krzysztof Ratajski and Krzysztof Kciuk2021, First roundKarel Sedláček and Adam Gawlas5–2
Different teams with a 100+ match average (Updated 29/06/2024)TeamTotalHighest Av.Year (+ Round)
Michael van Gerwen and Raymond van Barneveld6117.882014, Semi-finals
Gerwyn Price and Jonny Clayton3103.932021, Semi-finals
Krzysztof Ratajski and Krzysztof Kciuk2118.102023, Group Stage
Simon Whitlock and Paul Nicholson2108.412010, Group stage
Kim Huybrechts and Ronny Huybrechts2105.482013, Semi-finals
Damon Heta and Simon Whitlock1109.312022, Quarter-finals
Karel Sedláček and Adam Gawlas1103.472021, First round
Gary Anderson and Robert Thornton1102.352010, Group stage
Gary Anderson and Peter Wright1101.552019, First round
Danny Noppert and Michael van Gerwen1100.962024, Second round
Luke Humphries and Michael Smith1100.622024, Final
Kim Huybrechts and Dimitri Van den Bergh1100.202018, Quarter-finals
Steve Lennon and William O'Connor1100.202019, Semi-finals
Gerwyn Price and Mark Webster1100.142017, First round

Whitewashes

This table consists of the countries who have been whitewashed with the new pairs format (from the knockout stages) that was introduced in the 2023 PDC World Cup of Darts.

YearCountryLegsCountryNotes
202389.07 SCO Scotland8–0FRA France 80.59
202579.37 SCO Scotland0–8NED Netherlands 100.20

Individual

Ten highest World Cup of Darts one-match individual averagesAveragePlayerYear (+ Round)OpponentResult
121.97Kim Huybrechts2017, Quarter-finalsPaul Lim4–1 (L)
117.88Gerwyn Price2022, Quarter-finalsMartin Schindler4–0 (L)
115.62Ronny Huybrechts2017, Second roundJohn Michael4–0 (L)
115.10William O'Connor2019, Second roundRob Cross4–1 (L)
113.43Phil Taylor2015, FinalPeter Wright4–0 (L)
113.43Mensur Suljović2019, Second roundChuck Puleo4–0 (L)
113.38Raymond van Barneveld2018, Semi-finalsDimitri Van den Bergh4–2 (L)
111.33Michael van Gerwen2018, FinalGary Anderson4–0 (L)
110.64Dirk van Duijvenbode2022, Second roundSteve Lennon4–1 (L)
110.29Peter Wright2019, Quarter-finalsDimitri Van den Bergh4–2 (L)
Different players with a 100+ match average (Updated 19/06/2022)PlayerTotalHighest Av.Year (+ Round)
Phil Taylor10113.432015, Final
Raymond van Barneveld10113.382018, Semi-finals
Michael van Gerwen10111.332018, Final
Kim Huybrechts8121.972017, Quarter-finals
Simon Whitlock7107.772010, Semi-finals
Mensur Suljović7113.432019, Second round
Adrian Lewis6105.752013, Final
Gary Anderson6109.982010, Group stage
Gerwyn Price4117.882022, Quarter-finals
Peter Wright4110.292019, Quarter-finals
Dimitri Van den Bergh4107.542018, Semi-finals
Rob Cross3107.482018, Quarter-finals
Martin Schindler2110.002018, Quarter-finals
Robert Thornton2107.972014, Quarter-finals
Jonny Clayton2105.002020, Final
Mark Webster2104.112010, Final
Rowby-John Rodriguez2102.592016, Quarter-finals
Paul Lim2102.292018, Second round
Damon Heta2102.252020, Quarter-finals
Michael Smith3101.542020, Quarter-finals
Devon Petersen2101.522012, Quarter-finals
Ronny Huybrechts1115.622017, Second round
William O'Connor1115.102019, Second round
Dirk van Duijvenbode1110.642022, Second round
Richie Burnett1108.932012, Semi-finals
Dave Chisnall1104.732021, Semi-finals
James Wade1101.312021, Quarter-finals
Toni Alcinas1100.382010, Group stage
Ken MacNeil1100.272010, Group stage
Seigo Asada1100.162019, Semi-finals
Haruki Muramatsu1100.052013, Quarter-finals
Luke Humphries1113.102024, Final
Krzysztof Ratajski2118.452023, Group stage
Krzysztof Kciuk1117.702023, Group stage

References

References

  1. [http://www.pdc.tv/page/NewsdeskDetail/0,,10180~1968001,00.html PDC announces 3 new tournaments] {{webarchive. link. (2010-04-30 Retrieved 15 July 2010, PDC.tv)
  2. (15 July 2011). "Players Championship Finals Date Set". PDC.
  3. (9 June 2015). "bwin World Cup of Darts NetZone". PDC.
  4. [http://www.skysports.com/story/0,19528,12288_5954069,00.html PDC launch World Cup] Retrieved 15 July 2010 Skysports.com
  5. [http://www.pdc.tv/page/NewsdeskDetail/0,,10180~2225205,00.html Cash Converters World Cup Format] {{Webarchive. link. (2010-11-23 Retrieved 19 November 2010, PDC.tv)
  6. "World Cup of Darts expanded as radical new format announced". [[Professional Darts Corporation]].
  7. score decided in matches except for (p) which indicates score decided by points. Format changed from points to legs in 2023.
  8. "Betfair World Cup of Darts Tickets". [[Professional Darts Corporation]].
  9. "Bwin World Cup of Darts Schedule". [[Professional Darts Corporation]].
  10. "World Cup of Darts: Netherlands annihilate Scotland".
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