2006 PDC World Darts Championship

The 2006 Ladbrokes.com World Darts Championship was the 13th World Championship organised by the Professional Darts Corporation (PDC) since it separated from the British Darts Organisation (BDO). It was held from 19 December 2005 to 2 January 2006 at the Circus Tavern, Purfleet, Essex.

2006 Ladbrokes.com World Darts Championship
Tournament information
Dates19 December 2005 –
2 January 2006
VenueCircus Tavern
LocationPurfleet
Country England
Organisation(s)PDC
FormatSets
Final – best of 13
Prize fund£500,000
Winner's share£100,000
High checkout
Champion(s)
 Phil Taylor
«20052007»

Format and qualifiers

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A record field of 64 finalists assembled to battle for Phil Taylor's world crown. Play was not held between 22 December and Christmas Day due to the Christmas break. Play resumed on Boxing Day in the lead-up to the final. A day's break was also held on New Year's Eve for the New Year. Record prize money of £100,000 for the winner was on offer.

Despite the record field, there was a notable absentee. John Lowe's world ranking had fallen to a level which meant he was forced to qualify for the event – which he failed to do for the first time in his career. His run of 28 successive appearances (including the BDO World Championship) had come to an end. He was the last player to have appeared in a world championship each year since it began in 1978. Bob Anderson, who made his debut in 1984, now had the longest unbroken run – making his 23rd consecutive appearance for these championships.

A major shock came in the first round when world number one and top seed Colin Lloyd lost to Gary Welding – it was only the second time in the history of the PDC World Championship that the top seed fell in the first round (Peter Manley being the first in 2001). Welding, who had recovered from two sets down in his best-of-five-sets match against Lloyd, went on to reach the quarter-finals.

Phil Taylor became World Champion for the 13th time, this being his 11th PDC success. His toughest battle en route to the championship was a tight semi-final against Wayne Mardle which he managed to win by 6 sets to 5. The final was a more one-sided affair as Taylor overcame Peter Manley 7–0. It was Manley's third final defeat against Taylor and the second time he was whitewashed, mirroring the result of the 2002 final.[1][2]

Order of Merit

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Prize money

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Position (num. of players)Prize money
(Total: £500,000)[3]
Winner(1)£100,000
Runner-Up(1)£50,000
Semi-finalists(2)£20,000
Quarter-finalists(4)£12,500
Third round losers(8)£8,500
Second round losers(16)£5,000
First round losers(32)£3,500

Results

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Finals

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Quarter-finals (best of 9 sets)
30 December
Semi-finals (best of 11 sets)
1 January
Final (best of 13 sets)
2 January
         
  Gary Welding 75.480
Wayne Jones 86.675
Wayne Jones 91.290
5 Peter Manley 98.436
5 Peter Manley 91.925
20 Adrian Lewis 90.903
5 Peter Manley 91.720
2 Phil Taylor 106.747
2 Phil Taylor 105.575
7 Kevin Painter 89.131
2 Phil Taylor 97.146
6 Wayne Mardle 95.465
6 Wayne Mardle 94.805
14 Alan Warriner-Little 83.370

Rounds 1-4

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First round (best of 5 sets)
19–22 December
Second round (best of 7 sets)
26–28 December
Third round (best of 7 sets)
28–29 December
Quarter-finals (best of 9 sets)
30 December
            
1 Colin Lloyd 95.702
Gary Welding 90.253
  Welding 85.564
Q Extercatte 80.221
32 Darren Webster 86.472
Q Erwin Extercatte 83.193
  Welding 83.314
Q Kuczynski 84.092
16 Lionel Sams 72.470
Q John Kuczynski 81.983
Q Kuczynski 87.424
Q van der Rassel 84.183
17 Steve Beaton 82.720
Q Jan van der Rassel 85.683
  Welding 75.480
Jones 86.675
8 Andy Jenkins 91.783
Q Patrick Bulen 85.611
8 A. Jenkins 86.193
Jones 88.624
25 James Wade 83.412
Wayne Jones 85.113
  Jones 91.264
Alker 92.371
9 Denis Ovens 82.653
Geoff Wylie 78.631
9 Ovens 86.911
Alker 93.814
24 Alan Caves 83.581
Steve Alker 86.733
5 Peter Manley 83.523
Kevin Spiolek 70.440
5 Manley 84.244
J. Clark 85.113
28 Steve Maish 87.772
Jason Clark 88.363
5 Manley 88.744
21 D. Smith 86.673
12 Mark Walsh 89.683
Q Warren Parry 82.060
12 Walsh 77.610
21 D. Smith 87.994
21 Dennis Smith 87.293
Mark Salmon 83.452
5 Manley 91.925
20 Lewis 90.903
4 Roland Scholten 84.973
Dave Whitcombe 76.921
4 Scholten 87.574
Q Seyler 84.872
29 Jamie Harvey 80.960
Q Tomas Seyler 87.793
4 Scholten 92.283
20 Lewis 95.134
13 Dennis Priestley 95.693
Q John MaGowan 86.781
13 Priestley 87.572
20 Lewis 92.794
20 Adrian Lewis 90.503
Dave Honey 83.200
2 Phil Taylor 96.823
David Platt 84.820
2 Taylor 102.394
31 M. Clark 85.621
31 Matt Clark 86.043
Q Ken Woods 83.270
2 Taylor 108.304
Hamilton 97.050
15 Terry Jenkins 99.343
Jimmy Mann 94.132
15 T. Jenkins 93.031
Hamilton 96.094
18 Bob Anderson 87.742
Andy Hamilton 88.483
2 Taylor 105.575
7 Painter 89.131
7 Kevin Painter 86.463
Dale Newton 76.591
7 Painter 86.674
26 Newton 86.373
26 Wes Newton 81.983
Q Yasuhiko Matsunaga 74.550
7 Painter 95.734
10 Dudbridge 91.981
10 Mark Dudbridge 84.093
Q Darin Young 78.580
10 Dudbridge 94.624
Tabern 84.600
23 Alex Roy 90.352
Alan Tabern 87.973
6 Wayne Mardle 85.933
Q Brian Roach 74.001
6 Mardle 88.624
27 Clarys 77.791
27 Erik Clarys 80.283
Q Winston Cadogan 60.000
6 Mardle 92.194
11 Part 93.392
11 John Part 93.383
Q Chengan Liu 80.410
11 Part 95.464
22 Mason 95.493
22 Chris Mason 91.323
Steve Hine 85.741
6 Mardle 94.805
14 Warriner-Little 83.370
3 Ronnie Baxter 89.912
Q Ray Carver 87.713
Q Carver 87.783
A. Smith 89.224
30 Colin Monk 80.360
Andy Smith 87.773
A. Smith 85.442
14 Warriner-Little 86.344
14 Alan Warriner-Little 78.183
Q Andree Welge 74.160
14 Warriner-Little 87.634
Q Convery 78.960
19 Dave Askew 82.330
Q Gerry Convery 83.373

Representation from different countries

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This table shows the number of players by country in the World Championship.


ENG

NED

SCO

WAL

BEL

AUS

NIR

GER

USA

CAN

CHN

JPN

NZL

BAR
Total
Final200000000000002
Semis400000000000004
Quarters800000000000008
Round 312101000011000016
Round 221311100122000032
Round 140322212233111164
Total40322212233111164

References

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  1. ^ "No chance of a Power cut". Irish Examiner. 3 January 2006. Retrieved 5 February 2024.
  2. ^ Phillips, Michael (3 January 2006). "Taylor storms to 13th world title". The Guardian. Retrieved 5 February 2024.
  3. ^ "2006 PDC World Championship Player Prize Money". Darts Database. Archived from the original on 1 July 2015. Retrieved 5 February 2024.