1997 WDC World Darts Championship

The 1997 Red Band World Darts Championship was held between 29 December 1996 and 5 January 1997 at the Circus Tavern in Purfleet, Essex. It was the fourth World Championship organised by the World Darts Council, which had acrimoniously split from the British Darts Organisation in 1992–93. As a result of an ongoing legal battle, this would be the last time that the WDC name would be used – an out-of-court settlement (Tomlin Order) in June 1997 meant that the organisation had to change its name to the Professional Darts Corporation (PDC).

1997 Red Band World Darts Championship
Tournament information
Dates29 December 1996 –
5 January 1997
VenueCircus Tavern
LocationPurfleet
Country England
Organisation(s)PDC (WDC)
FormatSets
Final – best of 11
Prize fund£99,500
Winner's share£45,000
High checkout
Champion(s)
 Phil Taylor
«19961998»

Paul Lim, who famously hit a nine dart finish at the 1990 Embassy Championship appeared at his first WDC World Championship – he had only managed to qualify once for the Embassy since the split, losing a second round match to John Part in 1994.

The Championship saw two tight semi-finals, the most memorable of which was the clash between mentor and protégé – Eric Bristow and Phil Taylor. Taylor emerged victorious 5–4 in sets to reach the final. He matched his mentor's feat of five World Championship titles when he beat Dennis Priestley 6–3 in the final.[1] They were now level as the most successful players of all-time.

Seeds edit

  1. Dennis Priestley
  2. Phil Taylor
  3. Bob Anderson
  4. Peter Evison
  5. Jamie Harvey
  6. Alan Warriner
  7. Keith Deller
  8. Rod Harrington

Prize money edit

The prize fund was £99,500.

Position (num. of players)Prize money
(Total: £99,500)
Winner(1)£45,000
Runner-Up(1)£10,000
Third place(1)£5,000
Fourth place(1)£4,000
Quarter-finalists(4)£3,000
Group stage runners-up(8)£1,500
Group stage 3rd place(8)£1,250
Highest finish bonus(1)£1,500

Results edit

Preliminary round edit

A best of five sets preliminary round match took place between they were tied on the rankings.

Av.PlayerScorePlayerAv.
85.89Ritchie Gardner 3 – 1 Dave Kelly78.20
90.00Paul Lim 3 – 2 Tom Kirby83.00
95.05Chris Mason 3 – 0 Peter Manley89.10
101.89Gary Mawson 3 – 1 Harry Robinson87.33
75.21Graeme Stoddart 3 – 1 Paul Knighton91.83
79.44Steve Raw 3 – 2 Kevin Burrows59.10
93.99Dennis Smith 3 – 0 Jerry Umberger50.01
73.45Sean Downs 3 – 2 Tony Holyoake69.47

Group Stages edit

Knockout stages edit

Quarter-finals (best of 9 sets)
2–3 January
Semi-finals (best of 9 sets)
4 January
Final (best of 11 sets)
5 January
         
A1 Eric Bristow 85.785
B1 Alan Warriner (6) 88.813
A1 Eric Bristow 86.974
D1 Phil Taylor (2) 93.735
C1 Keith Deller (7) 87.391
D1 Phil Taylor (2) 98.585
D1 Phil Taylor (2) 100.916
H1 Dennis Priestley (1) 96.793
E1 Peter Evison (4) 91.395
F1 Jamie Harvey (5) 83.963
E1 Peter Evison (4) 91.324Third place play-off (best of 7 sets)
H1 Dennis Priestley (1) 94.345
G1 Rod Harrington (8) 94.502A1 Eric Bristow 83.232
H1 Dennis Priestley (1) 94.735E1 Peter Evison (4) 83.254

Representation from different countries edit

This table shows the number of players by country in the World Championship. Four countries were represented in the World Championship, one less than in the previous championship.


ENG

USA

CAN

SCO

IRL
Total
Final200002
Semis400004
Quarters700108
Group Stages18511126

References edit

  1. ^ "Darts Database. Database of Darts Results Players and Statistics". www.dartsdatabase.co.uk. Archived from the original on 21 October 2018. Retrieved 28 December 2017.