2000 PDC World Darts Championship

The 2000 Skol World Darts Championship was the seventh World Championship organised by the Professional Darts Corporation (PDC). It was held between 28 December 1999 and 4 January 2000 at the Circus Tavern in Purfleet, Essex.

2000 Skol World Darts Championship
Tournament information
Dates28 December 1999 –
4 January 2000
VenueCircus Tavern
LocationPurfleet
Country England
Organisation(s)PDC
FormatSets
Final – best of 13
Prize fund£111,000
Winner's share£31,000
High checkout170  Steve Raw
Champion(s)
 Phil Taylor
«19992001»

Phil Taylor beat Dennis Priestley in the final by 7 sets to 3, thus notching up his sixth successive World Championship and his eighth overall. As the tournament is staged earlier in the calendar year than most other World Championships in sport, Sky Sports commentators claimed that Taylor was the "first World Champion of the new millennium". For Priestley, it was the fourth time that he had lost to Taylor in the final in five years.

Eric Bristow's first-round defeat to American Steve Brown virtually signalled the end of the legendary player's career at the top level: this was to be the last time he appeared at a World Championship, having done so in 23 consecutive years stretching back to the inaugural event of 1978. John Lowe thus became the last remaining player with an unbroken appearance record.

Seeds edit

  1. Peter Manley
  2. Phil Taylor
  3. Rod Harrington
  4. Shayne Burgess
  5. Dennis Priestley
  6. John Part
  7. Alan Warriner
  8. Peter Evison

Prize money edit

The prize fund was £111,000.[1]

Position (num. of players)Prize money
(Total: £111,000)
Winner(1)£31,000
Runner-Up(1)£16,400
Semi-finalists(2)£6,400
Quarter-finalists(4)£3,400
Second round losers(8)£1,825
First round losers(16)£1,350
Highest finish bonus(1)£1,000

Results edit

First round (best of 5 sets)
28–29 December
Second round (best of 5 sets)
30 December
Quarter-finals (best of 9 sets)
1–2 January
Semi-finals (best of 9 sets)
3 January
Final (best of 13 sets)
4 January
               
1 Peter Manley 85.543
Bob Anderson 82.760
1 Peter Manley 90.493
Steve Brown 84.681
  Steve Brown 83.093
Eric Bristow 82.582
1 Peter Manley 87.135
8 Peter Evison 80.711
8 Peter Evison 88.373
Gerald Verrier 79.740
8 Peter Evison 80.323
Steve Raw 77.261
  Steve Raw 87.463
Scott Cummings 81.652
1 Peter Manley 97.072
5 Dennis Priestley 98.765
5 Dennis Priestley 96.313
Braulio Roncero 88.772
5 Dennis Priestley 83.583
Jamie Harvey 84.912
  Jamie Harvey 87.583
Kevin Spiolek 82.052
5 Dennis Priestley 90.245
4 Shayne Burgess 89.374
4 Shayne Burgess 92.023
Colin Lloyd 84.690
4 Shayne Burgess 91.603
Nigel Justice 82.200
  Nigel Justice 81.253
Dean Allsop 72.690
5 Dennis Priestley 91.793
2 Phil Taylor 94.427
2 Phil Taylor 103.263
Mick Manning 78.830
2 Phil Taylor 103.803
Graeme Stoddart 84.360
  Graeme Stoddart 77.043
Dan Lauby 75.192
2 Phil Taylor 105.885
7 Alan Warriner 92.250
7 Alan Warriner 92.263
Paul Lim 85.900
7 Alan Warriner 90.003
Alex Roy 78.250
  Alex Roy 79.313
Reg Harding 81.060
2 Phil Taylor 105.145
Dennis Smith 88.400
6 John Part 97.323
John Ferrell 79.570
6 John Part 90.490
Dennis Smith 91.313
  Dennis Smith 92.193
Cliff Lazarenko 86.571
  Dennis Smith 87.235
  John Lowe 87.613
3 Rod Harrington 93.552
John Lowe 90.893
  John Lowe 85.623
Keith Deller 87.512
  Keith Deller 82.133
Gary Mawson 74.350

Representation from different countries edit

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


ENG

CAN

USA

NED

SCO

SGP
Total
Final2000002
Semis4000004
Quarters8000008
Round 2131101016
Round 1243211132

References edit

  1. ^ "2000 PDC World Championship Player Prize Money". DartsDatabase. Retrieved 16 January 2018.