2020 European Championship (darts)
2020 Unibet European Championship | |||
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Tournament information | |||
Dates | 29 October–1 November 2020 | ||
Venue | König Pilsener Arena | ||
Location | Oberhausen | ||
Country | File:Flag of Germany.svg Germany | ||
Organisation(s) | PDC | ||
Format | Legs | ||
Prize fund | £500,000 | ||
Winner's share | £120,000 | ||
Nine-dart finish | Portugal José de Sousa (first round) | ||
High checkout | 170 Germany Max Hopp (first round) | ||
Champion(s) | |||
Scotland Peter Wright | |||
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The 2020 Unibet European Championship was the thirteenth edition of the Professional Darts Corporation's European Championship tournament, which saw the top players from the four European tour events compete against each other. The tournament took place from 29 October–1 November 2020 at the König Pilsener Arena in Oberhausen, Germany, in front of smaller, masked, socially distanced crowds, having been moved from its original venue of the Westfalenhallen in Dortmund.[1] Rob Cross was the defending champion after defeating Gerwyn Price 11–6 in the 2019 final. However, he was beaten 6–3 by Martijn Kleermaker in the first round, as was top seed Joe Cullen in another upset, who lost to William O'Connor by the same scoreline. Peter Wright won the tournament for the first time with an 11–4 win over James Wade in the final.[2] José de Sousa hit a nine-darter in his first-round match with Jeffrey de Zwaan, which he won 6–3.[3]
Prize money
The 2020 European Championship has a total prize fund of £500,000, the same as its previous edition.[4] The following is the breakdown of the fund:
Position (no. of players) | Prize money (Total: £500,000) | |
---|---|---|
Winner | (1) | £120,000 |
Runner-up | (1) | £60,000 |
Semi-finalists | (2) | £32,000 |
Quarter-finalists | (4) | £20,000 |
Last 16 (second round) | (8) | £10,000 |
Last 32 (first round) | (16) | £6,000 |
Qualification
The 2020 tournament continued the new qualification system used in the two previous editions: the top 32 players from the European Tour Order of Merit qualified for the tournament.[5] The Order of Merit is solely based on prize money won in the four European tour events during the season, reduced from the planned 13 due to the COVID-19 pandemic. As with the previous tournaments, players were drawn in a fixed bracket by their seeded order with the top qualifier playing the 32nd, the second playing the 31st and so on. Glen Durrant (who would've been 23rd seed) had to withdraw from the tournament after testing positive for COVID-19 the week before,[6] allowing William O'Connor to enter the tournament as the 32nd seed.[5] The following players qualified for the tournament:
- England Joe Cullen (first round)
- Wales Gerwyn Price (second round)
- Portugal José de Sousa (second round)
- South Africa Devon Petersen (semi-finals)
- Netherlands Michael van Gerwen (second round)
- England Michael Smith (second round)
- Austria Mensur Suljović (second round)
- England Nathan Aspinall (second round)
- England James Wade (runner-up)
- Poland Krzysztof Ratajski (first round)
- Netherlands Danny Noppert (first round)
- England Mervyn King (first round)
- England Rob Cross (first round)
- Wales Jonny Clayton (semi-finals)
- Scotland Peter Wright (champion)
- England Jamie Hughes (second round)
- England Dave Chisnall (first round)
- Germany Gabriel Clemens (first round)
- Germany Max Hopp (first round)
- Netherlands Martijn Kleermaker (second round)
- England Ian White (quarter-finals)
- Netherlands Dirk van Duijvenbode (quarter-finals)
- England Steve West (quarter-finals)
- Republic of Ireland Steve Lennon (first round)
- Netherlands Maik Kuivenhoven (first round)
- Northern Ireland Daryl Gurney (first round)
- England Ross Smith (first round)
- Lithuania Darius Labanauskas (first round)
- England Andy Hamilton (first round)
- Netherlands Jeffrey de Zwaan (first round)
- Belgium Kim Huybrechts (first round)
- Republic of Ireland William O'Connor (quarter-finals)
Draw
References
- ↑ Allen, Dave (2 October 2020). "2020 European Championship moves to Oberhausen". Professional Darts Corporation. Retrieved 2 October 2020.
- ↑ Allen, Dave (November 2020). "Terrific Wright wins Unibet European Championship". Professional Darts Corporation. Retrieved 1 November 2020.
- ↑ Allen, Dave (29 October 2020). "De Sousa hits perfection as Unibet European Championship begins". Professional Darts Corporation. Retrieved 29 October 2020.
- ↑ Allen, Dave (9 January 2019). "Prize Money Soars Above £14m In 2019". PDC. Retrieved 15 January 2019.
- ↑ 5.0 5.1 "2020 European Tour Order of Merit". PDC. Archived from the original on 18 November 2020. Retrieved 18 November 2020.
- ↑ "Premier League Darts champion Glen Durrant tests positive for coronavirus". Sky Sports. 22 October 2020. Retrieved 18 November 2020.