World Series of Darts (2006 tournament)

Last updated

2006 World Series of Darts
Tournament information
Dates19–21 May 2006
Venue Mohegan Sun Casino
Location Uncasville, Connecticut
CountryUnited States
Organisation(s) PDC
Format Legs
Prize fund$300,000
Winner's share$100,000
High checkout161Flag of Canada (Pantone).svg  John Part  (CAN)
Champion(s)
Flag of England.svg  Phil Taylor  (ENG)
«N/A 2007»

The World Series of Darts was a professional darts tournament held from 19 to 21 May 2006 at the Mohegan Sun Casino, in Uncasville, Connecticut. It was the first and only edition of the competition, which was established by the Professional Darts Corporation (PDC) to capitalise on the potentially large North American market. It was the second of four PDC non-ranking events in the 2006 season and featured 32 players: 16 American entrants and 16 PDC players. There was a $1,000,000 bonus to the winner of the tournament if they were from the United States.

Contents

Phil Taylor, the 13-time world champion, defeated Adrian Lewis 13 legs to five (13–5) in the final, which was the latter's first appearance in the final of a major broadcast tournament. Before his match with Lewis, Taylor defeated qualifier Tim O'Gorman in the first round, Terry Jenkins in the second round, Mark Dudbridge in the quarter-finals and Ronnie Baxter in the semi-finals. John Part, the two-time world champion, made the tournament's highest checkout, a 161 in leg seven of his first round loss to qualifier and American number one John Kuczynski.

Background and format

The Mohegan Sun Casino, where the tournament was held Mohegan sun at dusk crop.jpg
The Mohegan Sun Casino, where the tournament was held

The World Series of Darts was announced in The New York Times as a "made-for-television darts championship" in October 2005. [1] It was launched in early 2006 by sports promoter and Professional Darts Corporation (PDC) chairperson Barry Hearn, and executive producer Michael Davies. [2] This was done because North America was possibly a large market for darts. [3] The tournament was held from 19 to 21 May 2006, [4] in Uncasville, Connecticut, [5] [6] and was the second of four non-ranking PDC-sanctioned events in the 2006 season. [7] It was the only edition of the competition, which became the US Open in 2007. [3] The competition featured a 32-player main draw held at the Mohegan Sun Casino. [5] [6]

A total of 16 PDC players automatically qualified for the tournament based on their positions in the PDC world rankings following the 2006 PDC World Darts Championship. [8] There were 16 seeds: Colin Lloyd, the world number one, was the first seed and Phil Taylor, the 13-time world champion, was seeded second. [9] There were 12 places decided by a series of qualifying rounds held between 4 February and 19 April at various locations across the United States. The remaining 4 spots were decided in a competition which took place at the Mohegan Sun Resort on 19 May. [8] [10] The maximum number of legs played in a match increased from 11 in the first and second rounds to 17 in the quarter-finals and 21 in the semi-finals, leading up to the best-of-25 legs final. [lower-alpha 1] [9]

The tournament was broadcast in the United States on ESPN and ESPN2 as a series of eight one-hour highlight programmes through July to September 2006. [12] [13] In the United Kingdom, Sky Sports broadcast a weekly highlights programme of the event from August to October. [14]

Prize fund

The event had a total prize fund of $300,000 for all PDC entrants; [9] a special $1,000,000 bonus was put up for an American champion because of British dominance in world darts. [5] A PDC player would earn $100,000 for winning the event. [11] The breakdown of prize money is shown below: [9]

Qualification

Entrants in each of the 12 regional qualifying rounds had to be aged 21 or over and be a citizen of the United States. The qualifying events were staged as single-elimination tournaments and featured a total prize fund of $9,600; $800 was available for each competition. All fixtures was best-of-seven legs with the players throwing for the bullseye ring to determine who would play first should a match enter a seventh, game-ending leg. There were four seeds given to the four highest-ranked participants at each competition, based on the Bull's Eye News Pro Rankings. [15]

The two-stage Mohegan Sun tournament "Friday Night Madness" was held late on 19 May. Players had to be citizens of the United States and aged 21 or over; those who were in a previous qualifier could enter. [15] A total of 256 competitors played within a 32-board setup in the arena. [16] The first stage saw players attempt to achieve as low a score as possible in the fewest number of throws. The 16 players with the lowest overall scores including tiebreaks advanced to stage two, which was a single-elimination, bracket system and best-of-seven leg matches with no seeds. The four winners of stage two qualified for the main draw. [17]

Qualifier results
TournamentDate of tournament [10] Winner
Virginia Beach Qualifier4 February 2006Flag of Hong Kong.svg  Isen Veljic  (Hong Kong)
Atlanta Qualifier5 February 2006Flag of the United States.svg  Roger Carter  (USA)
New Jersey Qualifier11 February 2006Flag of the United States.svg  Jim Widmayer  (USA)
Philadelphia Qualifier4 March 2006Flag of the United States.svg  Jim Watkins  (USA)
Chicago Qualifier5 March 2006Flag of the United States.svg  Dave DePriest  (USA)
Washington, D.C. Qualifier11 March 2006Flag of the United States.svg  Joe Chaney  (USA)
Las Vegas Qualifier12 March 2006Flag of the United States.svg  John Kuczynski  (USA)
Connecticut Qualifier18 March 2006Flag of the United States.svg  Tim Grossman  (USA)
Houston Qualifier19 March 2006Flag of the United States.svg  Joe Slivan  (USA)
Marlborough Qualifier1 April 2006Flag of the United States.svg  Ray Carver  (USA)
Ronkonkoma Qualifier2 April 2006Flag of the United States.svg  Joe Efter  (USA)
Somerville Qualifier22 April 2006Flag of the United States.svg  Tom Curtin  (USA)
Friday Night Madness19 May 2006Flag of the United States.svg  Bill Davis  (USA)
Flag of the United States.svg  Tim O'Gorman  (USA)
Flag of the United States.svg  Jeff Russell  (USA)
Flag of the United States.svg  Brad Wethington  (USA)
Sources: [16] [18]

Tournament summary

Round 1

Dennis Priestley (pictured in 2007) reached the semi-finals of the tournament. DennisPriestley (cropped).jpg
Dennis Priestley (pictured in 2007) reached the semi-finals of the tournament.

The draw for the first round of the championship was conducted by tournament director Tommy Cox as well as Lloyd and Taylor on 27 April. [9] The first round of the competition, in which 32 players participated, took place on 20 May. [16] Lloyd won 6–2 over Isen Veljic on the double 10 ring after losing the first leg to Veljic. Adrian Lewis averaged 81.98 points over three throws in his 6–0 whitewash of Jim Widmayer before fellow qualifier Tom Curtin achieved a 95 checkout in his 6–1 loss to Andy Jenkins. The game between Denis Ovens and Bill Davis began with both players sharing the opening two legs. Ovens took the following three legs before Davis drew to within one leg behind at 5–4. Ovens defeated Davis 6–4 on the double five ring on his final throw. Peter Manley moved 3–1 ahead before his opponent Ray Carver went 4–3 behind. Manley took the following two legs without response to win 6–3. [19] Mark Walsh, the 2005 UK Open finalist, led Friday Night Madness qualifier Jeff Russell 4–0, [19] before his opponent made checkouts of 54 and 121 to go 4–3 behind. The next two legs were shared before Walsh made a 115 checkout to defeat Russell 6–4. [20]

Roland Scholten produced checkouts of 91 and 76 and a finish on the double 20 ring to lead Roger Carter 3–0. Carter won leg four on the double 16 ring before Scholten took three legs in succession for a 6–1 victory. [19] [20] Dennis Priestley, a two-time world champion, beat Joe Efter 6–1 with five legs in a row including a 110 checkout in leg two; Efter took leg six on the double 20 ring. Tim O'Gorman lost 6–2 to Taylor, who achieved a three-dart average of 96.05, before Terry Jenkins led Tim Grossman 3–1 and overcame a mid-game challenge from the latter to win the match 6–4 on the double 20 ring. World number six Kevin Painter defeated World Championship and World Matchplay entrant Jim Watkins 6–3. [19] Leading 3–1, the fifth and six legs were shared before Painter claimed three successive legs to win the match. [20] Mark Dudbridge, a former World Championship finalist, made checkouts of 101 and 66 and a finish on the double 20 ring to whitewash Joe Slivan 6–0. [19]

Wayne Mardle, the number six seed, beat Dave DePriest 6–3. Mardle won the first two legs without reply before DePriest took legs three and four to level at 2–2. Mardle took three legs in succession and DePriest finished on the double 8 ring in leg eight. Mardle completed the win on the double 4 ring in leg nine. [19] John Kuczynski, the United States number one, was the only American to qualify for the next round with a 6–5 win over John Part, [20] [21] the two-time world champion. [19] The first two legs were shared before Part led 2–1 and then Kuczynski 4–2, which included an event-high 161 checkout from Part in leg seven. [19] Both players took the match to an 11th leg that Kuczynski won on his second throw at the double 20 ring. [20] World number three Ronnie Baxter and Brad Wethington exchanged the first two legs of their match before Baxter won five legs in succession for a 6–1 victory, which included a 104 checkout in leg four. The final first round match saw Alan Warriner-Little whitewash Joe Chaney 6–0. [19]

Round 2

Adrian Lewis (pictured in 2011) qualified for the first major broadcast final of his career at the tournament. Adrian Lewis.jpg
Adrian Lewis (pictured in 2011) qualified for the first major broadcast final of his career at the tournament.

The second round was held from 20 to 21 May; because of time constraints, four-second round matches were staged on the evening of 20 May. [16] [20] Lewis defeated Lloyd 6–5 in a match that went to a final leg decider. Lewis won leg one before Lloyd took two in a row for the lead. After a short interval to check the air conditioning, Lewis took a 5–3 lead before the game went to 5–5 and Lewis won it on the double 12 ring. Ovens came from 3–1 behind Jenkins to tie the match at 3–3. Jenkins clinched leg seven before Ovens took three legs in a row to win 6–4 on a 56 checkout achieved in two throws. [22] Manley led Walsh 5–1 on four finishes on the double 20 ring and a 116 checkout in leg five. Walsh achieved a Shanghai (a 120 checkout) to claim leg seven after Manley failed five times to secure the win. Manley hit the double 10 ring on his second throw in leg seven to win 6–2. Priestley took the first three legs and Scholten the fourth. The game went to 5–3 before Scholten won leg nine on the double 20 ring. Priestley secured a 6–4 win in leg ten on the double 2 ring. [22]

Taylor won the first three legs of his game against Jenkins before the latter took three of the next four. He took the eighth leg on a checkout of 76 and won the match 6–3 in 11 throws in leg nine. Dudbridge defeated Painter 6–5 in a match that concluded with a final leg decider. Painter took the first two legs, which included a 107 checkout in the second. The following three legs were shared before Dudbridge came from 4–3 down to tie in leg eight. Dudbridge took the ninth leg and Painter the tenth on the double 16 ring. The final leg saw Dudbridge win on a 64 checkout completed on the double 8 ring. [22] Mardle led Kuczynski 4–1 before the latter completed a 119 checkout on the bullseye ring to be two legs behind. The seventh leg was won by Mardle and the eighth by Kuczynski on the double 20 ring. Mardle secured leg nine for a 6–3 victory and eliminated the last American player in the competition. The final second round match saw Baxter defeat Warriner-Little 6–4. [22]

Quarter-finals

All four quarter-finals were played as the best-of-17 legs on 21 May. [4] Lewis and Ovens played the first quarter-final. Ovens led 5–4 as Lewis achieved checkouts of 120, 84 and 74. He claimed leg 11 to put himself 6–5 in front before Lewis took the lead with a 75 checkout in the 13th leg after the former twice failed to finish on the double 16 ring. Lewis finished on the double 20 ring and achieved a 108 checkout completed on the double 18 ring to win 9–6. [23] Manley and Priestley were in the second quarter-final. Priestley led 6–5 by winning four legs in succession before Manley achieved a finish on the double 10 ring to tie the match after Priestley failed to hit a double ring. Priestley retook the lead on a 124 checkout achieved on the bullseye ring in leg 13 before Manley again tied by hitting the double 20 ring after Priestley failed to strike a double ring. Priestley followed up by twice hitting the double 20 ring over the following two legs to defeat Manley 9–7. [23]

The third quarter-final was contested between Dudbridge and Taylor. Trailing 2–1, Dudbridge produced checkouts of 126 and 64 to lead 3–2 before Taylor claimed the following five legs without reply on checkouts of 73, 99 and 88 to lead 7–3. Dudbridge reduced Taylor's lead to one leg before the latter won legs 14 and 15 to defeat Dudbridge 9–6. [23] The last quarter-final was played by Baxter and Mardle. Baxter appeared set for a comfortable victory as he led 7–1 over Mardle with a finish on the double 20 ring and a 97 checkout entering the interval. Mardle took leg nine with a finish on the double 20 ring and the 10th with a 156 checkout. He won the next two to go 7–5 behind before failing on four occasions to win leg 13, which Baxter took. Baxter failed to win the match in the 14th leg, allowing Mardle to finish on the double 6 ring. The next leg saw Baxter complete a checkout of 121 on the double 18 ring to win 9–6. [23]

Semi-finals

Phil Taylor (pictured in 2009) won the tournament, defeating Lewis in the final. Philtaylor.jpg
Phil Taylor (pictured in 2009) won the tournament, defeating Lewis in the final.

Both of the semi-finals on 21 May were best-of-21 legs. [4] Lewis and Priestley played the first semi-final. Lewis won the first three legs on a 93 checkout in the first and finishes of 11 and 12 throws in the second and third. Priestley took leg four on the double 8 ring before Lewis went 5–1 ahead and then averaging almost 104 points with a 58 per cent finishing record on the double rings in the next three legs to lead 9–1 at the interval. Lewis' average fell to 98.72 in the next two legs to beat Priestley 11–1 and qualify for the first major broadcast final of his career. [24]

The second semi-final was between Baxter and Taylor. Both players shared the opening two legs before Taylor achieved a checkout of 125 in the third leg and a finish on the double 12 leg in the fourth to lead Baxter 3–1. Checkouts of 69 and 65 gave Baxter the following two legs to equalise at 3–3. The next two legs were shared before Taylor won three in a row to go 7–4 ahead. Baxter claimed leg 12 on a 90 checkout finished on the bullseye ring before Taylor took the next four legs without response to win the match 11–5 on a 160 checkout and a final spot. [24]

Final

The best-of-25 legs final between Lewis and Taylor took place on the same day. [4] Taylor took the first leg on a 126 checkout and the following four to lead 5–0. Lewis took legs six and seven before Taylor won three legs in succession to increase his lead to 8–2. A checkout of 74 completed on the bullseye ring won Lewis leg 11 and Taylor took the 12th with a 158 checkout. Taylor moved further ahead with a finish on the double 16 ring in the 13th leg before Lewis struck the double 4 ring in leg 14. Taylor claimed two more legs before Lewis won leg 17 on the double 4 ring after Taylor twice failed to hit the double 12 ring. Taylor completed a 78 checkout on the double 10 ring to win the match 13–5. [25]

Taylor achieved a three-dart average of 102.72 and earned $100,000 prize money for winning the competition. [25] [26] He commented on the win: "I’m thrilled to have won this. It was hard for both me and Adrian in the final because we’re very close, and he played brilliantly. I knew I couldn’t let him in and I had to be better than anything he threw at me." [21] Lewis said of his loss to Taylor: "I was looking forward to the final but it was hard to concentrate because it was Phil. But I'll learn from this and I'm confident I can get a different result the next time we meet." [26]

Main draw

Numbers given to the left of players' names show the seedings for the top 16 players in the tournament. [9] The sixteen qualifiers are indicated by (US1/FMN1). [16] [18] The figures in brackets to the right of a competitor's name state their three-dart averages in a match. Players in bold denote match winners of the main draw. [4] [27]

First round
Best of 11 legs [19]
Second round
Best of 11 legs [22]
Quarter-finals
Best of 17 legs [23]
Semi-finals
Best of 21 legs [24]
Final
Best of 25 legs [25]
               
1 Flag of England.svg  Colin Lloyd  (ENG)87.256
US1 Flag of Hong Kong.svg  Isen Veljic  (Hong Kong)81.002
1 Flag of England.svg Colin Lloyd 89.255
16 Flag of England.svg Adrian Lewis 93.216
16 Flag of England.svg  Adrian Lewis  (ENG)81.986
US3 Flag of the United States.svg  Jim Widmayer  (USA)73.570
16 Flag of England.svg Adrian Lewis 89.039
9 Flag of England.svg Dennis Ovens 86.926
8 Flag of England.svg  Andy Jenkins  (ENG)88.816
US12 Flag of the United States.svg  Tom Curtin  (USA)72.241
8 Flag of England.svg Andy Jenkins 84.324
9 Flag of England.svg Denis Ovens 89.666
9 Flag of England.svg  Denis Ovens  (ENG)88.036
FNM2 Flag of the United States.svg  Bill Davis  (USA)80.254
16 Flag of England.svg Adrian Lewis 98.7211
13 Flag of England.svg Dennis Priestley 82.971
5 Flag of England.svg  Peter Manley  (ENG)91.286
US10 Flag of the United States.svg Ray Carver (USA)84.423
5 Flag of England.svg Peter Manley 83.106
12 Flag of England.svg Mark Walsh 69.352
12 Flag of England.svg  Mark Walsh  (ENG)83.776
FNM1 Flag of the United States.svg  Jeff Russell  (USA)85.134
5 Flag of England.svg Peter Manley 88.037
13 Flag of England.svg Dennis Priestley 89.949
4 Flag of the Netherlands.svg  Roland Scholten  (NED)91.246
US2 Flag of the United States.svg  Roger Carter  (USA)81.081
4 Flag of the Netherlands.svg Roland Scholten 97.394
13 Flag of England.svg Dennis Priestley 96.216
13 Flag of England.svg  Dennis Priestley  (ENG)82.756
US11 Flag of the United States.svg  Joe Efter  (USA)72.911
16 Flag of England.svg Adrian Lewis 102.475
2 Flag of England.svg Phil Taylor 93.0613
2 Flag of England.svg  Phil Taylor  (ENG)96.056
FNM3 Flag of the United States.svg  Tim O'Gorman  (USA)77.932
2 Flag of England.svg Phil Taylor 104.886
15 Flag of England.svg Terry Jenkins 99.593
15 Flag of England.svg  Terry Jenkins  (ENG)80.006
US8 Flag of the United States.svg  Tim Grossman  (USA)70.664
2 Flag of England.svg Phil Taylor 105.469
10 Flag of England.svg Mark Dudbridge 94.716
7 Flag of England.svg  Kevin Painter  (ENG)77.426
US4 Flag of the United States.svg  Jim Watkins  (USA)72.623
7 Flag of England.svg Kevin Painter 89.865
10 Flag of England.svg Mark Dudbridge 97.196
10 Flag of England.svg  Mark Dudbridge  (ENG)92.976
US9 Flag of the United States.svg  Joe Slivan  (USA)73.450
2 Flag of England.svg Phil Taylor 101.4511
3 Flag of England.svg Ronnie Baxter 94.815
6 Flag of England.svg  Wayne Mardle  (ENG)89.906
US5 Flag of the United States.svg Dave DePriest (USA)86.753
6 Flag of England.svg Wayne Mardle 93.446
US7 Flag of the United States.svg John Kuczynski 89.653
11 Flag of Canada (Pantone).svg  John Part  (CAN)89.085
US7 Flag of the United States.svg  John Kuczynski  (USA)86.116
6 Flag of England.svg Wayne Mardle 86.206
3 Flag of England.svg Ronnie Baxter 94.069
3 Flag of England.svg  Ronnie Baxter  (ENG)84.366
FNM4 Flag of the United States.svg  Brad Wethington  (USA)73.981
3 Flag of England.svg Ronnie Baxter 92.026
14 Flag of England.svg Alan Warriner-Little 88.674
14 Flag of England.svg  Alan Warriner-Little  (ENG)87.556
US6 Flag of the United States.svg  Joe Chaney  (USA)69.650

Notes

  1. Each leg began with a maximum of 501 points and continued until one player subtracted their score to zero. [5] [11]

Related Research Articles

<span class="mw-page-title-main">John Part</span> Canadian darts player

John Part is a Canadian former professional darts player and current commentator, as well as competing in World Seniors events. Nicknamed "Darth Maple", he is a three-time World Champion, having won the 1994 BDO World Darts Championship on his world championship debut, and the PDC World Championship in 2003 and 2008. Part is statistically North America's greatest darts player to date. He has the distinction of being the first non-UK player to win the World Championship, and the only non-European to date to win the PDC World Darts Championship.

The 2007 Ladbrokes.com World Darts Championship was the 14th World Championship organised by the Professional Darts Corporation since it separated from the British Darts Organisation. The tournament took place between 18 December 2006 – 1 January 2007. The championship was once again held at the Circus Tavern in Purfleet, Essex, where it had been staged since the first PDC World Championship in 1994. However, it would turn out to be the last time the tournament would be held at the Tavern: in April 2007, the PDC announced that the event would be moving to Alexandra Palace from 2008.

The 2005 Ladbrokes.com World Darts Championship was the 12th edition of the PDC World Darts Championship, and was held at the Circus Tavern, Purfleet taking place between 26 December 2004 and 3 January 2005.

The 2002 PDC World Darts Championship was a professional darts tournament held from 28 December 2001 to 5 January 2002 at the Circus Tavern in Purfleet, Essex. It was the ninth staging of the competition beginning with the 1994 edition and the ninth time it was held at the Circus Tavern. The competition was the first of 30 Professional Darts Corporation (PDC) tournaments in the 2002 season.

The 2001 PDC World Darts Championship was a professional darts tournament held from 28 December 2000 and 3 January 2001 at the Circus Tavern in Purfleet, Essex, England. It was the eighth staging of the competition since the 1994 competition. The competition was the first of 34 Professional Darts Corporation (PDC) tournaments in the 2001 season. The tournament was broadcast on Sky Sports and was sponsored by Skol.

The 2002 Stan James World Matchplay was a professional darts tournament held from 28 July to 3 August 2002 at the Empress Ballroom in the Winter Gardens of Blackpool. It was the ninth staging of the competition since the 1994 edition and the 18th of 35 Professional Darts Corporation (PDC) tournaments in the 2002 season. The tournament was broadcast on Sky Sports and was sponsored by the betting company Stan James.

The 2005 Stan James World Matchplay was the 12th staging of the major darts tournament by the Professional Darts Corporation (PDC). It was held at the Winter Gardens, Blackpool between 24th – 30th July 2005.

The 2004 Las Vegas Desert Classic, promoted at the time as the Las Vegas Desert Classic III, was the third year that the Professional Darts Corporation held a major darts tournament in the United States. It was held between 30 June and July 4, 2004.

The 2004 Budweiser UK Open was the second time the Professional Darts Corporation held the tournament which had quickly earned the nickname the "FA Cup of Darts". It was held at Bolton Wanderers' Reebok Stadium between 4–6 June 2004. Budweiser became the tournament's new sponsor.

This is a list of some of the major events and competitions in the sport of darts in 2007. Raymond van Barneveld proved to be the most successful player with ten professional tournament wins across the PDC and BDO, including four majors.

Mark "Flash" Dudbridge is an English professional darts player. He appeared in the 2005 Premier League Darts after reaching the final of the 2005 PDC World Darts Championship. He also is a former World Master and has reached the final of the World Matchplay.

The 2008 Ladbrokes.com World Darts Championship was the 15th World Championship organised by the Professional Darts Corporation since it separated from the British Darts Organisation. The event took place between 17 December 2007 and 1 January 2008 at the Alexandra Palace, London, England.

The 2008 Championship League Darts is the inaugural edition of a darts competition – the Championship League Darts. The competition is organised and held by the Professional Darts Corporation and has a maximum prize fund of £189,000.

The 2009 Ladbrokes.com World Darts Championship was the 16th World Championship organised by the Professional Darts Corporation since it separated from the British Darts Organisation. The event took place at Alexandra Palace in London from 19 December 2008 and 4 January 2009.

This article documents all the events in the sport of darts over the course of 2009.

The 2009 Las Vegas Desert Classic was a professional darts tournament staged from July 1 to July 5, 2009 at the Mandalay Bay Resort in Las Vegas, Nevada. It was the eighth and final staging of the event since the original 2002 edition, and the fourth time it took place at the Mandalay Bay Resort. The tournament was the third of five Professional Darts Corporation (PDC) premier events in the 2009 season. Online gambling website PartyPower.com sponsored the tournament broadcast on Sky Sports.

The 2009 Championship League Darts is the second edition of a darts competition—the Championship League Darts. The competition is organized and held by the Professional Darts Corporation and has a maximum prize fund of £189,000.

The 2010 Players Championship Finals was a professional darts tournament held at the Circus Tavern in Purfleet, England, from 28 to 31 January 2010. It was the first of the five Professional Darts Corporation (PDC) premier events in the 2010 calendar and the second edition of the tournament. The event was sponsored by the betting company totesport.com and featured an increased prize fund of £250,000 with £60,000 going to the winner.

The RTL7 Masters was a professional darts tournament held at the Hotel Zuiderduin in Egmond aan Zee, Netherlands, between 18 and 21 March 2011. It was the second of the seven non-ranking Professional Darts Corporation (PDC) events in the 2011 season. The competition was created by RTL 7 as a new darts tournament to be staged in the Netherlands and was contested by 12 players: six from the Netherlands and six foreigners in four groups of three.

The World Series of Darts Festival was a series of five professional darts competitions organised by the Professional Darts Corporation (PDC) in the Tropicana Ballroom of the Tropicana Hotel, in Las Vegas, Nevada, from 26 to 30 June 2010. It was established to replace the Las Vegas Desert Classic, and featured the 501-point and cricket formats. There was a £200,000 prize fund divided between all five events.

References

  1. Rhodes, Joe (23 October 2005). "Bull's-Eye: TV's Next No-Limit Wager". The New York Times . Archived from the original on 29 May 2015. Retrieved 29 May 2015.
  2. "Darts taking its cue as perfect TV entertainment". Business Live. 30 January 2006. Archived from the original on 23 July 2020. Retrieved 23 July 2020.
  3. 1 2 "US Open". Mastercaller. Archived from the original on 18 October 2020. Retrieved 23 July 2020.
  4. 1 2 3 4 5 "US Open 2006 – Bracket". Mastercaller. Archived from the original on 23 July 2020. Retrieved 23 July 2020.
  5. 1 2 3 4 Bomulie, Jonathan (18 July 2006). "Players shoot for $1M" . The Scranton Times-Tribune . p. B6. Archived from the original on 18 October 2020. Retrieved 23 July 2002 via Newspapers.com.
  6. 1 2 Boyer, Leroy (21 May 2006). "Schuylkill ace aims for bull's-eye" (page 1, page 2). Republican Herald . pp. B1 & B3. Retrieved 18 October 2020 via Newspapers.com.{{cite news}}: External link in |format= (help)
  7. "2006 PDC Darts Event Calendar". Darts Database. Archived from the original on 8 June 2020. Retrieved 23 July 2020.
  8. 1 2 Allen, David. "$1M On Offer in World Series of Darts". Bull's Eye News. Archived from the original on 30 March 2006. Retrieved 23 July 2020.
  9. 1 2 3 4 5 6 "Official Round One Draw". Bull's Eye News. 27 April 2006. Archived from the original on 14 June 2006. Retrieved 23 July 2020.
  10. 1 2 "World Series of Darts – Qualifying Event Schedule". Planetdarts.tv. Archived from the original on 24 August 2006. Retrieved 23 July 2020.
  11. 1 2 J. Lewy, Harlan (14 May 2006). "Another Casino, Another World Series: Darts". The New York Times. Archived from the original on 23 July 2020. Retrieved 23 July 2020.
  12. Harris, F. M. (July–August 2006). "ESPN Reschedules WSOD Broadcast Times". Bull's Eye News. Archived from the original on 14 November 2006. Retrieved 23 July 2020.
  13. "ESPN Premiere: Darts in Prime Time". Bull's Eye News. July–August 2006. Archived from the original on 15 July 2006. Retrieved 18 October 2020.
  14. "World Series of Darts Hits Sky Sports Screens". Professional Darts Corporation. 29 August 2006. Archived from the original on 23 July 2020. Retrieved 23 July 2020.
  15. 1 2 "Official Qualifier Rules & Regulations". Bull's Eye News. 29 December 2005. Archived from the original on 30 March 2006. Retrieved 23 July 2020.
  16. 1 2 3 4 5 Bromberg, Stacy (April 2013). "World Series of Darts–2006" (PDF). Stacy Bromberg. Archived (PDF) from the original on 23 July 2020. Retrieved 23 July 2020.
  17. "Friday Night Madness – Official Event Details Announced". Bull's Eye News. 27 April 2006. Archived from the original on 9 May 2006. Retrieved 23 July 2020.
  18. 1 2 "U.S. Regional Qualifiers: Player Profiles". Bull's Eye News. 19 April 2006. Archived from the original on 17 July 2006. Retrieved 23 July 2020.
  19. 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 "Round One: Results". Bull's Eye News. 20 May 2006. Archived from the original on 14 June 2006. Retrieved 23 July 2020.
  20. 1 2 3 4 5 6 "The PDC – 15; America – 1". Dartoid's World. 20 May 2006. Archived from the original on 2 September 2006. Retrieved 23 July 2020.
  21. 1 2 Morgan, Martin (23 May 2006). "Manley's $10,000 Richer After Last Eight in USA". News and Star . Archived from the original on 20 June 2006. Retrieved 24 July 2020.
  22. 1 2 3 4 5 "Round Two: Results". Bull's Eye News. 20 May 2006. Archived from the original on 14 June 2006. Retrieved 24 July 2020.
  23. 1 2 3 4 5 "World Series of Darts – Quarter-Finals". Planetdarts.tv. 21 May 2006. Archived from the original on 24 August 2006. Retrieved 24 July 2020.
  24. 1 2 3 "Semi-finals: Results". Bull's Eye News. 21 May 2006. Archived from the original on 14 June 2006. Retrieved 24 July 2020.
  25. 1 2 3 "Taylor Romps To World Series Title". Bull's Eye News. 21 May 2006. Archived from the original on 17 July 2006. Retrieved 24 July 2020.
  26. 1 2 "Taylor lands World Series crown". BBC Sport. 22 May 2006. Archived from the original on 29 June 2006. Retrieved 23 July 2020.
  27. "2006 World Series Of Darts Results". Darts Database. Archived from the original on 24 July 2020. Retrieved 24 July 2020.