2019 German Darts Championship

The 2019 German Darts Championship was the second of thirteen PDC European Tour events on the 2019 PDC Pro Tour. The tournament took place at Halle 39, Hildesheim, Germany, from 29–31 March 2019. It featured a field of 48 players and £140,000 in prize money, with £25,000 going to the winner.

2019 German Darts Championship
Tournament information
Dates29–31 March 2019
VenueHalle 39
LocationHildesheim
Country Germany
Organisation(s)PDC
FormatLegs
Prize fund£140,000
Winner's share£25,000
Nine-dart finishEngland James Wade
High checkout167 England Ricky Evans
167 Northern Ireland Daryl Gurney
Champion(s)
Netherlands Michael van Gerwen
«Event 1Event 3»

Michael van Gerwen was the defending champion after defeating James Wilson 8–6 in the final of the 2018 tournament, but he was defeated 6–4 in the second round by Keegan Brown.

Michael van Gerwen won his 25th European Tour title, by defeating Joe Cullen 8–2 in the final.

James Wade hit the second nine-dart finish of the 2019 European Tour season in his third round defeat to Darren Webster.

Prize money

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

Stage (num. of players)Prize money
Winner(1)£25,000
Runner-up(1)£10,000
Semi-finalists(2)£6,500
Quarter-finalists(4)£5,000
Third round losers(8)£3,000
Second round losers(16)£2,000*
First round losers(16)£1,000
Total£140,000
  • Seeded players who lose in the second round do not receive this prize money on any Orders of Merit.

Qualification and format

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The top 16 entrants from the PDC ProTour Order of Merit on 12 February 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 22 February), six from the European Tour Card Holder Qualifier (held on 22 February), two from the West & South European Associate Member Qualifier (held on 28 March), four from the Host Nation Qualifier (held on 28 March), one from the Nordic & Baltic Qualifier (held on 5 October 2018) and one from the East European Associate Member Qualifier (held on 19 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 only exceptions being that the Nordic & Baltic qualifiers for the first 3 European Tour events took place in late 2018, before the new ruling was announced.

Michael Smith, who was set to be the 8th seed, withdrew prior to the tournament draw. All seeds below him moved up a place, with James Wilson becoming sixteenth seed, and an extra place being made available in the host nation qualifier.

The following players will take part in the tournament:

Draw

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First round
(best of 11 legs)
29 March
Second round
(best of 11 legs)
30 March
Third round
(best of 11 legs)
31 March
Quarter-finals
(best of 11 legs)
31 March
Semi-finals
(best of 13 legs)
31 March
Final
(best of 15 legs)
31 March
1 Michael van Gerwen 108.104
Keegan Brown 91.296 Keegan Brown 104.126
Brown 99.106
Madars Razma 88.275
16 Wilson 85.670
16 James Wilson 87.696
Maik Langendorf 78.413 Mario Robbe 85.475
Brown 94.886
Mario Robbe 84.366
8 Price 93.705
8 Gerwyn Price 95.556
Mark Dudbridge 89.156 Mark Dudbridge 88.072
8 Price 102.566
Gabriel Clemens 85.054
9 Clayton 97.651
9 Jonny Clayton 97.246
Dave Prins 88.332 Simon Stevenson 90.102
Brown 91.633
Simon Stevenson 96.296
Evans 98.637
5 Mensur Suljović 91.994
Ricky Evans 88.656 Ricky Evans 96.436
Evans 101.686
Robert Thornton 93.104
King 97.524
12 Dave Chisnall 94.043
Diogo Portela 82.964 Mervyn King 95.516
Evans 100.416
Mervyn King 88.126
13 Webster 94.205
4 James Wade 91.766
Jyhan Artut 75.100 Boris Koltsov 89.361
4 Wade 105.645
Boris Koltsov 96.976
13 Webster 101.686
13 Darren Webster 91.426
Martin Atkins 90.952 Luke Humphries 95.245
Evans 97.196
Luke Humphries 100.716
10 Gurney 98.328
2 Ian White 104.796
Tytus Kanik 93.184 Jamie Hughes 107.215
2 White 96.484
Jamie Hughes 99.086
15 Bunting 92.906
15 Stephen Bunting 95.566
Steve Beaton 89.884 Dimitri Van den Bergh 96.385
15 Bunting 91.335
Dimitri Van den Bergh 92.406
10 Gurney 89.876
7 Rob Cross 99.966
Ron Meulenkamp 85.436 Ron Meulenkamp 97.664
7 Cross 92.902
Kim Viljanen 90.194
10 Gurney 94.976
10 Daryl Gurney 98.466
Josh Payne 88.084 Andy Boulton 97.281
10 Gurney 100.317
Andy Boulton 98.146
6 Lewis 100.345
6 Adrian Lewis 87.396
Kevin Knopf 72.756 Kevin Knopf 78.363
6 Lewis 109.976
Scott Taylor 76.114
11 Cullen 89.752
11 Joe Cullen 101.496
Mike Holz 93.031 Nathan Aspinall 101.254
6 Lewis 99.006
Nathan Aspinall 104.546
3 Wright 98.592
3 Peter Wright 96.466
Mike De Decker 92.553 Andrew Gilding 87.653
3 Wright 96.446
Andrew Gilding 98.026
14 Wattimena 100.333
14 Jermaine Wattimena 90.716
Steffen Siepmann 90.076 Steffen Siepmann 79.351
Mickey Mansell 81.922

References

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  1. ^ Allen, Dave. "Prize Money Soars Above £14m In 2019". PDC. Retrieved 15 January 2019.
  2. ^ Magnussen, Mads Plagborg. "Thanks for now Iceland". PDC Nordic & Baltic. Archived from the original on 15 January 2019. Retrieved 15 January 2019.