2019 Premier League Darts

The 2019 Unibet Premier League Darts was a darts tournament organised by the Professional Darts Corporation – the fifteenth edition of the tournament. The event began on Thursday 7 February at the Utilita Arena in Newcastle and ended with the Play-offs at The O2 Arena in London on Thursday 23 May. It was also the last to feature Raymond van Barneveld, as he retired from professional darts after the following World Darts Championship. He appeared a record 14 times in the Premier League Darts.

2019 Unibet Premier League Darts
Winner
Michael van Gerwen
Runner-up
Rob Cross
Score
11–5
Dates
7 February–23 May 2019
Edition
15th
Number of players
9 (plus 9 guests)
Venues
16
Premier League Darts
< 2018 | 2019 | 2020 >

Michael van Gerwen was the three-time defending champion after defeating Michael Smith 11–4 in the 2018 final. He won a fourth consecutive (and fifth overall) title by defeating Rob Cross 11–5 in the final.

Format

The tournament format was modified for this season.[1]

Phase 1: During the first nine nights, eight of the nine players play each other in four matches and the ninth player plays one match against one of the nine contenders. At the end of Phase 1, the bottom player is eliminated from the competition.

Phase 2: In the seven nights of weeks 9 to 15, each player plays the other seven players once. In a change from previous years, all players only play one match each night. Phase 2 matches have been increased to a maximum of fourteen legs, allowing for a 7-7 draw. In previous years, the maximum number of legs was twelve. At the end of Phase 2, the bottom four players in the league table are eliminated from the competition.

Play-off Night: The top four players in the league table contest the two knockout semi-finals with 1st playing 4th and 2nd playing 3rd. The semi-finals are first to 10 legs (best of 19). The two winning semi-finalists meet in the final which is first to 11 legs (best of 21).

Venues

Other locations of the 2019 Premier League venues in Europe.
Newcastle Glasgow Dublin Exeter
Utilita Arena
Thursday 7 February
SSE Hydro
Thursday 14 February
3Arena
Thursday 21 February
Westpoint Arena
Thursday 28 February
Aberdeen Nottingham Berlin Rotterdam
BHGE Arena
Thursday 7 March
Motorpoint Arena Nottingham
Thursday 14 March
Mercedes-Benz Arena
Thursday 21 March
Rotterdam Ahoy
Wednesday 27 & Thursday 28 March
Belfast Liverpool Cardiff Birmingham
SSE Arena Belfast
Thursday 4 April
M&S Bank Arena
Thursday 11 April
Motorpoint Arena Cardiff
Thursday 18 April
Arena Birmingham
Thursday 25 April
Manchester Sheffield Leeds London
Manchester Arena
Thursday 2 May
FlyDSA Arena
Thursday 9 May
First Direct Arena
Thursday 16 May
The O2
Thursday 23 May

Players

The players in this year's tournament were announced following the 2019 PDC World Darts Championship final on 1 January, with the top four of the PDC Order of Merit joined by six Wildcards.

Gary Anderson, who qualified as fourth on the Order of Merit, withdrew on 4 February, three days prior to the tournament beginning, with a back injury.[2]

Player Appearance in
Premier League
Consecutive
Streak
Order of Merit
Rank
Previous best performance Qualification
Michael van Gerwen 7th 7 1 Winner (2013, 2016, 2017, 2018) PDC Order of Merit
Rob Cross 2nd 2 2 Semi-final (2018) PDC Order of Merit
Peter Wright 6th 6 3 Runner-up (2017) PDC Order of Merit
Daryl Gurney 2nd 2 5 5th (2018) PDC Wildcard
Michael Smith 3rd 2 6 Runner-up (2018) PDC Wildcard
Gerwyn Price 2nd 2 7 10th (2018) PDC Wildcard
James Wade 10th 1 10 Winner (2009) PDC Wildcard
Mensur Suljović 2nd 2 8 9th (2018) Sky Sports Wildcard
Raymond van Barneveld 14th 14 28 Winner (2014) Sky Sports Wildcard

Nine invited players were chosen to appear on each of the nine Phase 1 nights in the slots which were available as a result of the withdrawal of Gary Anderson due to extended treatment for a back injury. The nine main players could earn league points if they won or drew against the invited players. The invited players would not earn any points in the competition.[3]

Player Venue Order of Merit
Rank
Chris Dobey Newcastle 35
Glen Durrant Glasgow 74
Steve Lennon Dublin 36
Luke Humphries Exeter 56
John Henderson Aberdeen 19
Nathan Aspinall Nottingham 34
Max Hopp Berlin 30
Dimitri Van den Bergh Rotterdam (27 March) 33
Jeffrey de Zwaan Rotterdam (28 March) 43

Prize money

The prize money for the 2019 tournament was set to increase to £855,000 from £825,000 in 2018.[4] As the contenders picked up four draws between them it ended up being a total of £851,500.

StagePrize Money
Winner£250,000
Runner-up£120,000
Semi-finalists (x2)£80,000
5th place£70,000
6th place£60,000
7th place£55,000
8th place£50,000
9th place£35,000
'Contenders' win (x0)£5,000
'Contenders' draw (x4)£3,500
'Contenders' lose (x5)£2,500
League Winner Bonus£25,000
Total£825,000

League stage

Players in italics are "Contenders", and will only play on that night. [5]

  1. Please note these are not calculated properly and are not indicative of actual averages for each night.

Play-offs – 23 May

The O2 Arena, London

Score
Semi-finals (best of 19 legs)
Michael van Gerwen
96.48
10–7 Daryl Gurney
94.02
Rob Cross
100.31
10–5 James Wade
91.91
Final (best of 21 legs)
Michael van Gerwen
103.36
11–5 Rob Cross
100.98
Night's Total Average: 97.84
Highest Checkout: Michael van Gerwen 130
Most 180s: Michael van Gerwen 8
Night's 180s: 21

Table and streaks

Table

After the withdrawal of Gary Anderson, nine invited players were added to replace him with one playing each week. After the first nine rounds in phase 1, the bottom player in the table is eliminated. In phase 2, the eight remaining players play in a single match on each of the seven nights. The top four players then compete in the knockout semi-finals and final on the playoff night.

The nine invited players are not ranked in the table, but the main nine players can earn league points for a win or draw in the games against them.

Two points are awarded for a win and one point for a draw. When players are tied on points, leg difference is used first as a tie-breaker, after that legs won against throw and then tournament average.

# Name Pts Matches Legs Scoring
Pld W D L LF LA +/- LWAT 100+ 140+ 180s A HC C%
1 Michael van Gerwen W2316103310767+404020812341101.9413249.08%
2 Rob Cross RU2216102410276+26391901175499.6916444.16%
3 James Wade201676310484+20382741504497.8716143.70%
4 Daryl Gurney19168359386+7332261304596.7214040.26%
5 Gerwyn Price18166649993+633223945496.1617042.67%
6 Mensur Suljović17167369495–1362481544295.7914439.66%
7 Michael Smith101634979105–26242151335597.0817035.59%
8 Peter Wright91625976108–32222151384395.5216041.76%
9 Raymond van Barneveld4161264257–1512115652596.3517036.46%

(Q) = Qualified For The Playoffs (E) = Eliminated From Playoff Contention

Streaks

Player Phase 1, Weeks 1 to 8 Phase 2, Weeks 9 to 15 Play-offs
1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8A 8B 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 SF F
Michael van Gerwen W W W L D W L W W D W W D L W W W W
Rob Cross D W L W W W W L W W W L D W W L W L
James Wade W L D W W L D D W L D W D W D W L
Daryl Gurney L W W L L D W W W L D L W W D W L
Gerwyn Price W D D D W L L L W D W W D L D W
Mensur Suljović D L D W L W W W L W L W D W L L
Michael Smith L D L W L W L W L D L L D L D L
Peter Wright D D W L W D D L L D L L L L L L
Raymond van Barneveld L D D L L L W L L Eliminated
Contenders D L L D D L L D L N/A
Legend: WWinDDrawLLossEliminated

Positions by Week

Player Phase 1, Weeks 1 to 8 Phase 2, Weeks 9 to 15
1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8A 8B 9 10 11 12 13 14 15
Michael van Gerwen 3 1 1 1 3 1 2 1 1 2 2 1 1 2 2 1
Rob Cross 5 3 6 3 2 2 1 2 2 1 1 2 2 1 1 2
James Wade 2 6 5 2 1 3 3 4 3 4 3 3 3 3 3 3
Daryl Gurney 8 4 2 7 7 8 7 9 4 5 6 6 6 5 5 4
Gerwyn Price 1 2 3 4 4 5 6 7 6 6 4 4 4 6 6 5
Mensur Suljović 4 9 8 5 6 6 4 3 5 3 5 5 5 4 4 6
Michael Smith 7 7 9 8 8 7 9 8 8 8 8 8 7 8 7 7
Peter Wright 6 5 4 6 5 4 5 6 7 7 7 7 8 7 8 8
Raymond van Barneveld 9 8 6 9 9 9 8 7 9 Eliminated

References

  1. Allen, Dave. "2019 Unibet Premier League Schedule". PDC. Retrieved 30 December 2018.
  2. Phillips, Josh. "Anderson Withdraws From 2019 Unibet Premier League". PDC. Retrieved 4 February 2019.
  3. Phillips, Josh. "Premier League 'Contenders' To Replace Injured Anderson". PDC. Retrieved 4 February 2019.
  4. Allen, Dave. "Prize Money Soars Above £14m In 2019". PDC. Retrieved 9 January 2019.
  5. Allen, Dave. "2019 Unibet Premier League Fixtures". PDC. Retrieved 18 January 2019.
  6. Porter, Matthew [@MattPorter_PDC] (7 February 2019). "And here are all the stats from a great night in front of a sell out 7000+ crowd at the Utilita Arena in Newcastle..." (Tweet) via Twitter.
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