2008 European Championship (darts)

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Template:Infobox individual darts tournament The 2008 PartyPoker.net European Championship was the inaugural edition of the Professional Darts Corporation tournament, which thereafter was promoted as the annual European Championship, matching top European players qualifying to play against the highest ranked players from the PDC Order of Merit.

Played from 30 October–2 November 2008 at the Südbahnhof in Frankfurt, Germany, the inaugural tournament featured a field of 32 players and £200,000 in prize money, with a £50,000 winner's purse going to Phil Taylor.[1]

Format

First round — best of nine legs (by two legs)
Second round — best of seventeen legs (ditto)
Quarter-finals — best of seventeen legs (ditto)
Semi-finals — best of twenty-one legs (ditto)
Final — best of twenty-one legs (ditto)

Each game had to be won by two clear legs, except that a game went to a sudden death leg if a further six legs did not separate the players; for example, a first round match played out to 7-7 is then decided with one sudden death leg.

Prize money

A total of £200,000 was on offer to the players, divided based on the following performances:

Position (no. of players) Prize money
(Total: £200,000)
Winner (1) £50,000
Runner-Up (1) £25,000
Semi-finalists (2) £12,500
Quarter-finalists (4) £8,500
Last 16  (second round) (8) £4,000
Last 32  (first round) (16) £2,000
Highest checkout (1) £2,000

Qualification

The top 16 players from the PDC Order of Merit after the 2008 Sky Poker World Grand Prix automatically qualified for the event. Then the top 8 non-qualified players from the 2008 Players Championship Order of Merit after the October German Darts Trophy in Dinslaken, Germany joined them to make a field of 24.

The main European contingent then came from the following: the leading 4 non-qualified players from the 2008 Continental Europe Order of Merit following the October German Darts Trophy in Dinslaken, the top two non-qualified players from the German Darts Corporation rankings on October 25, and the last two places from a qualifier event held in Dinslaken on October 26 - an event which was open to any player with a full PDPA membership.

PDC Top 16
  1. Template:Flagicon Phil Taylor (champion)
  2. Template:Flagicon Raymond van Barneveld (quarter-finals)
  3. Template:Flagicon James Wade (second round)
  4. Template:Flagicon John Part (first round)
  5. Template:Flagicon Terry Jenkins (first round)
  6. Template:Flagicon Colin Lloyd (first round)
  7. Template:Flagicon Andy Hamilton (first round)
  8. Template:Flagicon Wayne Mardle (second round)
  9. Template:Flagicon Adrian Lewis (runner-up)
  10. Template:Flagicon Alan Tabern (quarter-finals)
  11. Template:Flagicon Dennis Priestley (second round)
  12. Template:Flagicon Roland Scholten (first round)
  13. Template:Flagicon Mervyn King (second round)
  14. Template:Flagicon Colin Osborne (first round)
  15. Template:Flagicon Ronnie Baxter (quarter-finals)
  16. Template:Flagicon Peter Manley (semi-finals)
Players Championship qualifiers
  1. Template:Flagicon Denis Ovens (second round)
  2. Template:Flagicon Robert Thornton (semi-finals)
  3. Template:Flagicon Mark Walsh (quarter-finals)
  4. Template:Flagicon Chris Mason (first round)
  5. Template:Flagicon Kevin Painter (first round)
  6. Template:Flagicon Vincent van der Voort (first round)
  7. Template:Flagicon Alex Roy (first round)
  8. Template:Flagicon Wayne Jones (first round)
European qualifiers
  1. Template:Flagicon Carlos Rodríguez (second round)
  2. Template:Flagicon Mensur Suljović (second round)
  3. Template:Flagicon Jelle Klaasen (second round)
  4. Template:Flagicon Jan van der Rassel (first round)
German Darts Corporation qualifiers
  1. Template:Flagicon Andree Welge (first round)
  2. Template:Flagicon Hannes Schnier (first round)
Dinslaken event qualifiers

Draw and results

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Scores after player's names are three-dart averages (total points scored divided by darts thrown and multiplied by 3)

All games had to be won by 2 clear legs, if after six more legs the players still couldn't be separated, a sudden death leg would take place to decide the winner. i.e. if Round One matches went 7-7, there would have been a decider.

Television coverage and sponsorship

The PDC announced on 12 August 2008 that ITV4 would broadcast the entire event live.[1] This was the second PDC darts tournament that ITV4 has broadcast, after the inaugural Grand Slam of Darts - after its rating success ITV chose to broadcast this event as well as the 2008 Grand Slam of Darts.

The tournament was sponsored by PartyPoker.net, which has also sponsored other darts championships: the US Open, the Las Vegas Desert Classic and the German Darts Championship.

References

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External links

Template:European Championship Darts Template:2008 in PDC darts