2014 PDC World Cup of Darts

PDC World Cup of Darts
Tournament information
Dates 6–8 June
Venue Alsterdorfer Sporthalle
Location Hamburg
Country Germany
Organisation(s) PDC
Format Legs
Prize fund £200,000
Winners share £40,000
Champion(s)
 Netherlands
« 2013 2015»

The 2014 PDC World Cup of Darts was the fourth edition of the PDC World Cup of Darts which took place between 6–8 June in Hamburg, Germany.

The Netherlands pairing of Michael van Gerwen and Raymond van Barneveld won their country's second World Cup title by defeating defending champions Phil Taylor and Adrian Lewis of England 3–0 in the final.[1]

The Netherlands averaged the third highest television average of 117.88 against Northern Ireland in their semi-final doubles match, the highest ever televised doubles average.[2]

Format

The tournament was expanded from 24 nations to 32 this year. 16 teams were seeded and were drawn to face the remaining 16 teams in the first round. Unlike in previous years, there are no groups this year with the tournament being a straight knockout.[3]

First round: Best of nine legs doubles.
Second round, quarter and semi-finals: Two best of seven legs singles matches. If the scores are tied a best of seven legs doubles match will settle the match.
Final: Four best of seven legs singles matches. If the scores are tied a best of seven legs doubles match will settle the match.

Prize money

Prize money is per team:[4]

Stage Prize Money
(Total: £200,000)
Winners £40,000
Runners-up £20,000
Semi-finalists £14,000
Quarter-finalists £7,000
Last 16 £4,500
Last 32 £3,000

Teams and seeding

[5]

Seeded nations

Rank Country Top two ranked players
1  England Phil Taylor and Adrian Lewis
2  Netherlands Michael van Gerwen and Raymond van Barneveld
3  Scotland Peter Wright and Robert Thornton
4  Australia Simon Whitlock and Paul Nicholson
5  Wales Mark Webster and Richie Burnett
6  Northern Ireland Brendan Dolan and Michael Mansell
7  Belgium Kim Huybrechts and Ronny Huybrechts
8  Ireland Connie Finnan and William O'Connor
9  Germany Jyhan Artut and Andree Welge
10  Austria Mensur Suljović and Rowby-John Rodriguez
11  Canada John Part and Shaun Narain
12  Finland Jarkko Komula and Jani Haavisto
13  Hong Kong Royden Lam and Scott MacKenzie
14  Sweden Magnus Caris and Peter Sajwani
15  Spain Antonio Alcinas and Carlos Rodriguez
16  United States Darin Young and Larry Butler

Unseeded nations

Country Top two ranked players
 China Yin Deng and Jun Cai
 Denmark Per Laursen and Dennis Lindskjold
 France Jacques Labre and Lionel Maranhao
 Gibraltar Dylan Duo and Dyson Parody
 Hungary Zsolt Meszaros and Nándor Bezzeg
 India Amit Gilitwala and Nitan Kumar
 Italy Marco Brentegani and Daniele Petri
 Japan Morihiro Hashimoto and Haruki Muramatsu
 Malaysia Kesava Roa and Thomat Darus
 New Zealand Rob Szabo and Craig Caldwell
 Norway Robert Wagner and Vegar Elvevoll
 Poland Krzysztof Chmielewski and Krzysztof Strozyk
 Russia Evgenii Zhukov and Evgenii Izotov
 Singapore Paul Lim and Harith Lim
 South Africa Devon Petersen and Graham Filby
 Thailand Thanawat Gaweenuntawong and Watanyu Charoonroj

Results

The draw was made on 16 May by John McDonald and Wayne Mardle.[6]

First round
[7]
Second round
[8]
Quarter-finals
[9]
Semi-finals
[2]
Final
[2]
               
1  England 91.65 5
 Thailand 80.85 0
1  England 2
16  United States 1
16  United States 94.15 5
 Hungary 77.04 1
1  England 2
 South Africa 0
8  Ireland 82.44 3
 Singapore 86.04 5
 Singapore 1
 South Africa 2
9  Germany 82.94 3
 South Africa 97.40 5
1  England 2
4  Australia 1
5  Wales 82.33 5
 France 71.23 4
5  Wales 2
 Poland 1
12  Finland 81.30 4
 Poland 83.48 5
5  Wales 1
4  Australia 2
4  Australia 87.98 5
 Denmark 85.13 2
4  Australia 2
13  Hong Kong 1
13  Hong Kong 84.98 5
 Norway 84.57 2
1  England 0
2  Netherlands 3
2  Netherlands 85.03 5
 Italy 75.05 2
2  Netherlands 2
15  Spain 0
15  Spain 82.40 5
 New Zealand 79.97 3
2  Netherlands 2
7  Belgium 1
7  Belgium 91.65 5
 India 69.96 0
7  Belgium 2
10  Austria 0
10  Austria 70.79 5
 China 63.78 2
2  Netherlands 2
6  Northern Ireland 1
6  Northern Ireland 97.14 5
 Malaysia 73.16 2
6  Northern Ireland 2
 Japan 0
11  Canada 78.57 4
 Japan 77.33 5
6  Northern Ireland 2
3  Scotland 1
3  Scotland 87.82 5
 Russia 76.15 1
3  Scotland 2
14  Sweden 0
14  Sweden 75.89 5
 Gibraltar 76.49 2

References

This article is issued from Wikipedia - version of the Saturday, January 16, 2016. The text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share Alike but additional terms may apply for the media files.