2018 Grand Slam of Darts
2018 bwin Grand Slam of Darts | |||
---|---|---|---|
Tournament information | |||
Dates | 10–18 November 2018 | ||
Venue | Aldersley Leisure Village | ||
Location | Aldersley, Wolverhampton | ||
Country | England | ||
Organisation(s) | PDC | ||
Format | Legs | ||
Prize fund | £450,000 | ||
Winner's share | £110,000 | ||
Nine-dart finish | Dimitri Van den Bergh | ||
High checkout | 170 Simon Whitlock (x2) (Group stage) Stephen Bunting (Group stage) Gerwyn Price (Semi-final) | ||
Champion(s) | |||
Gerwyn Price | |||
|
The 2018 bwin Grand Slam of Darts was the twelfth staging of the tournament, organised by the Professional Darts Corporation. The event took place from 10–18 November 2018 in Wolverhampton, England, but for the first time in the event's history, it was not at the Wolverhampton Civic Hall, as it is undergoing a two-year renovation. The 2018 tournament was held at Aldersley Leisure Village.[1] Beginning with this tournament, the winner of the title would receive "The Eric Bristow Trophy", named after the legendary player who died in April 2018.
The tournament's defending champion was Michael van Gerwen, who won the tournament in 2017 by defeating Peter Wright 16–12 in the final to win it for a third straight year,[2] but lost in the semi-finals to Gary Anderson by the same scoreline 16–12.
Gerwyn Price won his first PDC major title by defeating Gary Anderson 16–13, in a highly controversial final.[3] Price also became the first Welsh player to win a PDC major title.
The DRA launched an investigation into the behaviour from both players in the final. Price was fined £21,500 a total of 'Bringing the sport into disrepute and gamesmanship' in the final and in his Quarter-Final clash with Simon Whitlock. Price was also given a three month ban, which is suspended for 6 months. Anderson was given a formal warning for pushing Price on the oche.[4] Price's fine was subsequently reduced on appeal to a total of £11,500.[5]
Dimitri Van den Bergh hit the fourth nine dart leg in Grand Slam of Darts history, in his second round match with Stephen Bunting, and for the first time in the tournament history no Englishman progressed into the quarter-final stage.[6]
Prize money
The prize fund for the Grand Slam was the same as in 2017, with the winner getting £110,000.[7]
Position (num. of players) | Prize Money (Total: £450,000) | |
---|---|---|
Winner | (1) | £110,000 |
Runner-up | (1) | £55,000 |
Semi-finalists | (2) | £28,500 |
Quarter-finalists | (4) | £16,000 |
Last 16 (Second round) | (8) | £10,000 |
Third in group | (8) | £5,000 |
Fourth in group | (8) | £3,000 |
Group winner bonus | (8) | £2,500 |
Nine-dart finish | (1) | £25,000 |
Qualifying
PDC Qualifying Tournaments
At most sixteen players could qualify through this method, where the position in the list depicts the priority of the qualification.
As the list of qualifiers from the main tournaments produced fewer than sixteen players, the field of sixteen players is filled from the reserve lists. The first list consists of the winners from 2018 European Tour events, in which the winners are ordered by number of event wins then in Order of Merit position order at the cut-off date.
PDC European Tour | |||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Tournament | Event | Position | Player | Qualifiers | |
2018 European Tour | |||||
European Darts Open | Winner | Michael van Gerwen | Gerwyn Price Ian White Max Hopp | ||
German Darts Grand Prix | Winner | Michael van Gerwen | |||
German Darts Open | Winner | Max Hopp | |||
Austrian Darts Open | Winner | Jonny Clayton | |||
European Darts Grand Prix | Winner | Michael van Gerwen | |||
Dutch Darts Masters | Winner | Michael van Gerwen | |||
Gibraltar Darts Trophy | Winner | Michael van Gerwen | |||
Danish Darts Open | Winner | Mensur Suljović | |||
European Darts Matchplay | Winner | Michael van Gerwen | |||
German Darts Championship | Winner | Michael van Gerwen | |||
Dutch Darts Championship | Winner | Ian White | |||
International Darts Open | Winner | Gerwyn Price | |||
European Darts Trophy | Winner | Michael van Gerwen | |||
Note: Players in italics had already qualified for the tournament. |
If there are still less than sixteen qualified players after the winners of European Tour events are added, the winners of 2018 Players Championships events will be added, firstly by winners of multiple events followed by Order of Merit order.
- ^ Phil Taylor retired following the 2018 PDC World Darts Championship.
- ^ Corey Cadby withdrew from the Grand Slam,[8] due to an arm injury.[9]
PDC Qualifying Event
A further eight places in the Grand Slam of Darts were filled by qualifiers from a PDC qualifier that took place in Wigan on 5 November. These are the qualifiers:
- Martin Schindler
- Stephen Bunting
- Andrew Gilding
- Steve Hine
- Mark Webster
- Joe Murnan
- Keegan Brown
- Ryan Searle
BDO Qualifying Tournaments
Tournament | Year | Position | Player |
---|---|---|---|
BDO World Darts Championship | 2018 | Winner | Glen Durrant |
Runner-up | Mark McGeeney | ||
World Masters | 2018 | Winner | Adam Smith-Neale |
BDO World Trophy | 2018 | Winner | Glen Durrant |
BDO Ranking Qualifiers
The remaining 5 BDO places are determined via the BDO Invitational Rankings, at the end of September 2018.[10]
Pools
Pool A | Pool B | Pool C | Pool D |
---|---|---|---|
(PDC Seeded Players) | (PDC Qualifiers) | (BDO Qualifiers) | |
Michael van Gerwen (1) |
Dimitri Van den Bergh |
Josh Payne |
Glen Durrant |
Draw
Group stage
[11]
[12]
[13]
[14]
All group matches are best of nine legs
After three games, the top two in each group qualify for the knock-out stage
NB: P = Played; W = Won; L = Lost; LF = Legs For; LA = Legs Against; +/− = Plus/Minus Record, in relation to legs; Pts = Points; Status = Qualified to Knockout Stage
Group A
10 November
11 November
13 November
|
Group B
10 November
11 November
13 November
|
Group C
10 November
11 November
13 November
|
Group D
10 November
11 November
13 November
|
Group E
10 November
11 November
12 November
|
Group F
10 November
11 November
12 November
|
Group G
10 November
11 November
12 November
|
Group H
10 November
11 November
12 November
|
Knockout stage
References
|