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pdc lost tour cards

These players will lose their PDC Tour Cards after 2022/23 PDC World Darts Championship

During the World Darts Championship , the battle for the world title takes center stage, but in the background, some players are still fighting to keep the PDC Tour Card, while some others are trying to earn one.

The top-64 players in the world rankings after the World Darts Championship are guaranteed a PDC Tour Card for 2023. So are the players who received Tour Cards in early 2022.

For 27 players it is already clear that they will lose their PDC Tour Card after this year. Among them include Scott Mitchell, Glen Durrant , John Henderson , Max Hopp and Steve West who will lose their spots on the Pro Tour. They can try to regain a Tour Card at the Q-School in January 2023.

Durrant announces next move after losing PDC Tour Card, accepts invitation to 2023 World Seniors Darts Championship

Keegan Brown , Niels Zonneveld, Geert Nentjes and Danny Baggish have virtually lost their PDC Tour Card, but with a good performance at the World Darts Championship can still get into the top-64 of the PDC Order of Merit. Nentjes is already sure of a new Tour Card because of his high ranking on the Development Tour, the youth circuit of the PDC.

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Good performances by the aforementioned names then come at the expense of players who are currently narrowly in the top-64. Currently, Ron Meulenkamp sits on the edge in 64th. Meulenkamp did not qualify for the tournament at Alexandra Palace.

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That does include Lewy Williams (now 60th), Adam Gawlas (now 62nd) and Jeff Smith (now 63rd). Steve Lennon (59th) and Joe Murnan (61st), like Meulenkamp, must wait to see if he keeps his Tour Card.

Players who virtually still have PDC Tour Card, but may lose it after World Darts Championships

Steve Lennon (59th - will not play at World Cup)

Lewy Williams (60th - will play at World Cup)

Joe Murnan (61st - will not play at World Cup)

Adam Gawlas (62nd - will play in WC)

Jeff Smith (63rd - will play in WC)

Ron Meulenkamp (64th - will not play in WC)

Players who have virtually lost PDC Tour Cards, but are in action at World Darts Championships

Keegan Brown (65th)

Niels Zonneveld (67th)

Geert Nentjes (71st - in case of loss of Tour Card, Nentjes gets new Tour Card via Development Tour)

Danny Baggish (89th)

Players who lost their PDC Tour Card anyway

Maik Kuivenhoven

Scott Mitchell

William Borland

Glen Durrant

Jason Heaver

Andy Boulton

John Henderson

Jeffrey de Zwaan

Gordon Mathers

Boris Koltsov

Berry van Peer

Peter Hudson

Eddie Lovely

John Michael

Jon Worsley

Geert de Vos

Brett Claydon

Zoran Lerchbacher

Michael Unterbuchner

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UNDER_ARTICLE

Thu 06 Jun 2024

"Can't remember this ever happening before" - Michael van Gerwen no longer a seeded player on European Tour

Fri 07 Jun 2024

Schedule Friday night at Nordic Darts Masters including Humphries, Price, Wright and Michael Smith

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PDC Tour Cards: Steve Lennon and Martijn Dragt become first players to win tour places at Qualifying Schools

Each daily winner in the UK and Germany competitions wins an automatic place on the 2024-25 tour, while cards are also available (13 in Europe and 10 in the UK) through the respective orders of merit

Thursday 11 January 2024 21:31, UK

Ireland's Steve Lennon is the one of the first players to win PDC Tour cards. Photo credit: PDC

Ireland's Steve Lennon and the Netherlands' Martijn Dragt became the first players to win PDC Tour Cards at the 2024 Qualifying Schools in Milton Keynes on Thursday.

Former World Cup of Darts runner-up Lennon narrowly lost his Tour Card following the 2023/24 World Darts Championship but won it back with a 101.42 average in a 6-2 win over Leighton Bennett.

The Irishman then saw off Shaun Wilkinson and Brett Claydon to reach the last 16 before coming up against Matthew Dennant and survived seven match darts to reach the quarter-finals.

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Lennon overcame Justin Hood in the quarter-finals and went on to defeat 27-year-old George Killington 6-2 in the semi-finals.

The 30-year-old then came back from 4-3 down to beat Borland 6-4 and reclaimed his place on the professional circuit.

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Meanwhile, 35-year-old Dragt defeated former Tour Card Holders Jesus Noguera, Rusty-Jake Rodriguez and Mario Vandenbogaerde on his way to the final.

UK Q School Order of Merit. Photo credit: PDC

Chris Landman took a 5-2 lead in the all-Ditch final before Dragt won four successive legs to win his first Tour Card.

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Each daily winner in the UK and Germany competitions wins an automatic place on the 2024-25 tour, while cards are also available (13 in Europe and 10 in the UK) through the respective orders of merit.

The final stage of PDC Q Schools features 128 players competing for a total of 31 tour cards for 2024-25 across the qualifying events in the UK and Germany.

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Corey Cadby, Adam Smith-Neale, Richard Veenstra and Josh Payne

Which of the 27 PDC Tour Card winners from Q School will shine in 2023 and who have reputations to repair?

There were 27 winners of PDC Tour Cards at the recent Qualifying School and Paul Nicholson assesses which of them have the best chance of making a mark in 2023.

The former major winner, commentator and pundit also shares his thoughts on a couple of the 'controversial' winners and looks at what lies ahead for those who missed out, including Fallon Sherrock.

UK Q School Winners

Ones to watch.

In one of my columns a few months ago about the Modus Super Series, I predicted Graham Hall and Graham Usher would go on to win Tour Cards at Q School due to the performance levels and consistency they’d both produced.

Hall had also impressed me on the WDF Tour last year and by the end of 2022, he really was an obvious candidate to get himself into the PDC ranks.

People may not know too much about him yet but they’ll be aware of him soon, because I believe he’s got the talent and ability to average around 94-95 for an entire season. He could do what Andrew Gilding did last year and be a genuine threat to the big names.

Usher has been a bit of a slow burner since reaching the World Masters quarter-finals in 2019, but if you look at the amount of money and confidence he’s gained from the Modus Super Series over the last couple of years, it’s no wonder he clinched his card on day two of Q School.

Of all the first-time Tour Card holders, I’d say Hall has the best chance of success.

However, 20-year-old Irishman Dylan Slevin is another PDC debutant that everyone should be excited about. I didn’t expect him to get a card so soon but he’s seriously talented and will have plenty of Irish friends on the circuit to help him find his feet.

Welcome back

I’m not surprised to see Josh Payne win his card back after a season away from the PDC circuit.

Some young players get their first cards and just assume they’ll be on tour for their entire career, but every now and again it’s good to get a bit of a shock that makes you reassess your game and the dedication you need to put in to stay there.

Keegan Brown, who came through Q School via the Order of Merit after losing his card at the end of last year, said to me the other week “You don’t know how valuable something is until it’s not there.”

Josh won the very first week of the Modus Super Series last year and that set the tone for a very good bounce back year in which he averaged in the mid-90s for the season and often exceeded 100. He text me this week to say ‘the hard work starts now’ so he’s under no illusions that it’s all about how he kicks on from here.

Point to prove

Arron Monk was the first ever World Youth champion beating Michael van Gerwen way back in 2011 but sadly he’s never been able to fulfil his potential.

He’s certainly got the talent and technical ability but he’s become a bit of Q School yo-yo player having yet to figure out the mental side of the game.

This process of getting back on tour before falling off it a few years later will keep happening until he does. I would say this to his face because I firmly believe only his mind is holding him back from becoming a world class top-32 player.

He can get very hot under the collar and doesn’t like losing, to put it mildly. Nobody likes to lose but it’s reactions to certain situations that let him down and he spends too much of his mental bandwidth on disappointment. He needs to speak to some kind of sports specialist to develop an anchoring process in his mind that can keep him calmer in all situations.

In all the time I’ve been involved in the sport, I’ve never known anyone as universally unpopular among the darting fraternity as Adam Smith-Neale. And that’s saying something considering some of the competition for that honour!

He’s got a tarnished reputation to put it mildly for how he’s behaved away from the oche and now he has the opportunity to try and repair it.

However, there’s a target on his back and when he’s in action on the Pro Tour, a lot of players will want to take him out and shut him up.

The fans don’t like him and even set up a petition to take away his Tour Card! I can’t ever remember that happening to anyone else.

When he played at the Lakeside on crutches with a broken leg a few years ago, a lot of players were laughing because he was the one who once jumped on Simon Whitlock and damaged his ankle. It hasn’t been the same since.

How about this for commitment to darts from the Big Dog?🐕 Adam Smith-Neale is throwing tungsten with a broken leg😲 @BDOdarts #lakesidedarts #bdodarts pic.twitter.com/BD9RlLGGEZ — Eurosport (@eurosport) January 6, 2019

In the day four final at Q School, pretty much everyone wanted Nick Kenny to beat him because that would have meant Conan Whitehead would have earned a Tour Card ahead of him on the Order of Merit.

It was made even more agonising for Whitehead when everyone found out retrospectively that he would have actually clinched his card if he hadn’t played on the final day! There’s no way he would have risked not playing given how many players could have overtaken him, but the way results panned out, he’d have been better off not playing, but he wasn’t to know that.

Don’t get me wrong, The Big Dog is an excellent player with a lot of confidence but he’s got a reputation to repair and two years to do it.

We’ll get a clue as to whether that’s possible after the first half of the season when we’ve seen what attitude he brings to the practice room and whether he’s made any friends or allies on the circuit. If he hasn’t, it could be a very lonely place for him.

He must conduct himself well because when more players find out about what he’s done to others in the past they’ll want to stamp on him. Dart players stick up for each other like family.

Fallon’s future

Fallon Sherrock missed out on a Tour Card via the Order of Merit by just a couple of wins but she’s right to be proud of her efforts.

When you think how well she played at the Modus Super Series towards the end of last year and also during parts of her clash with Ricky Evans at the World Championship, she’d got herself in great shape and that carried on into Q School.

There were a lot of very good players who finished below her in the table and when you consider how much criticism she gets on social media compared to everyone else, she deserves every bit of credit.

Although she didn’t get a card, all is not lost because there’s an exciting year ahead. She got the Women’s Series, which will crank up a notch with the ever increasing standards, as well as her Women’s World Matchplay title defence, while there will also be opportunities to play in the Modus Super Series, the Challenge Tour and the WDF if she so wishes.

I think she needs more competitive action to get into the kind of mould she was in when performing at her A Grade level a couple of years ago, and this year she won’t have her priorities split with the World Series.

A realistic goal for her is to win a Challenge Tour event and that will be a huge step in the right direction for her and women’s darts, plus if she does dedicate enough time to that, don’t rule out her chances of winning a PDC Tour Card via that route.

Not many players finished above her in Q School that didn’t win a card, so if she enters enough events and stays consistent, there’s no reason why she can’t achieve this.

European Q School

The king is back.

There wasn’t a lot of information as to how well Corey Cadby had been playing prior to Q School but we knew a player of his quality had a great chance of coming through.

His biggest obstacle was probably getting to Germany and being allowed to play because of the previous problems he’s had with the Australian authorities and possible visa issues.

After clearing that one and then subsequently winning his card pretty comfortably, he now has to get into the UK and stay here.

If he can get a sports visa like Damon Heta managed to and base himself in England, then there’s no reason why he can’t get back to winning ways and shoot up the rankings.

He put in some great numbers at Q School and he needs to do his best to make sure we focus on his ability rather than his chequered past and the things he’s said about certain people on social media, which I’m sure he regrets.

Corey has already given us one of the best stories of the season so far.

He turned up in Germany without his dart shoes and picked up a pair that he saw outside someone else’s room. They happened to be the right size so he wore them to Q School, won his Tour Card on day two of the final stage then thought he ought to return them.

But he did that only after writing “Corey Cadby, the King” on them in gold pen!

I’m happy he’s back on tour because he’ll ruffle feathers, play some exciting darts and get the public tuning in.

Dutch delight

Last time Jeffrey de Zwaan came through Q School he had a great first six months and reached the World Matchplay semi-finals.

I’m glad he’s getting a fresh start without the same ranking pressures for the next couple of years and maybe we’ll see him now fulfil his potential.

I’m also intrigued to see Jeffrey Sparidaans, who I’ve seen play a lot of BDO stuff down the years. His numbers weren’t amazing at Q School before getting his Tour Card on the opening day so although this will be a tough step up – it’s what he needs to find his next level among the ever-growing Dutch contingent.

Aside from the two Jeffreys, the Netherlands will also be represented by Gian van Veen, Owen Roelofs, Niels Zonneveld and Richard Veenstra.

Zonneveld is the ultimate Q School yo-yo player having now come through it three times! It’s almost like he enjoys the two-year process of losing his card before having to win it back!

Flying solo

With all due respect to everyone else who came through Q School, most eyes will be on Richard Veenstra because he really is a proper player and a threat for titles.

He has so much talent and an incredible mentality that nobody will ruffle. He’s fast, effective, dangerous and the one I’ll be watching closest over the next six months.

Flyers probably should have won at the Lakeside during his time in the BDO/WDF system – because he was always one of the best players on paper in his five appearances and although his best run was a semi-final, he did win plenty of other big titles.

He could have a career very similar to Gary Anderson, who also failed to land the biggest prize in the BDO before he finally moved to the PDC.

Like Anderson – and other players who found another level after switching – I think Richard will love the structure of PDC events and how you don’t have to wait a few hours for a match! This will play to his strengths. He has a fast style so expect him to challenge in the early Players Championship events this season and put himself in the qualification picture for several majors in his debut year.

This is the right time for Veenstra to make his name after years of treating darts as a ‘hobby’ away from his normal job.

He’ll have plenty of friends in the room and won’t be star struck whatsoever.

Waving the French flag

Last year we were all raving about Thibault Tricole and Jacques Labre being the future of French darts after they both won Challenge Tour events and enjoyed such great seasons.

It was crucial at least one of them picked up a Tour Card and now we do with Jacques – while I’m sure it won’t be too long before Thibault joins him.

I’m so glad we finally have a French presence on the PDC circuit and hopefully it’ll give the European Tour an excuse to go there!

Those who missed out

Jelle Klaasen will be bitterly disappointed to miss out on a Tour Card having gone to Q School ranked number one in the WDF system while Benito van de Pas is also another big Dutch name who also failed.

Max Hopp will be hurting right now but I think it’ll be good for him in the long run. He can enter events like the Modus Super Series and build his confidence up that way like many other Tour Card winners did.

There were high hopes for Polish teenager Sebastian Białecki so it was a shock to see him return home without success but he’s realistic about his goals.

He won’t be too disappointed and disappear off the scene, so expect him to be back very soon.

2023 PDC Qualifying Schools: Tour Card winners

Uk qualifying school.

Daily Winners

Arron Monk (Day One) Graham Usher (Day Two) Josh Payne, (Day Three) Adam Smith-Neale (Day Four)

Order of Merit

Keegan Brown Stephen Burton Dylan Slevin Adam Warner Lee Evans Graham Hall Nick Kenny Christian Perez Callum Goffin

European Qualifying School

Jeffrey Sparidaans (Day One) Corey Cadby (Day Two) Jeffrey de Zwaan (Day Three) Robbie Knops (Day Four)

Maik Kuivenhoven Pascal Rupprecht Ronny Huybrechts Karel Sedlaček Richard Veenstra Niels Zonneveld Daniel Klose Gian van Veen Jacques Labre Owen Roelofs

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Player Profil

Daniel larsson.

rank

  • Walk on music : A Little Less Conversation - Elvis Presley
  • Date of birth : June 19 1981
  • Home town : Uppsala
  • Darts Used : 24 g Shot Pro Series Daniel Larsson
  • Twitter : @Danieldart180
  • Instagram : daniellarsson81

Daniel Larsson is among the very best of dart players in Sweden, proven by his participation at the PDC World Championship in 2019, in which he won against Robert Thornton.

Daniel Larsson has proven himself one of the best Swedish dart players in the last couple of years. From 2016 until 2018 he has ended up in the top five on the PDCNB Pro Tour Ranking. In 2018 he even became number two, meaning he had qualified for the World Championship.

At the World Championship he won 3-1 against Robert Thornton in the first round, before losing out against Kim Huybrechts in the second round. He has since participated at another two World Championships.

Daniel Larsson has also won seven SDC or PDCNB Pro Tours throughout time. In 2016 he won his first, as he won the first Pro Tour event in Denmark.

Daniel has also participated on the European Tour a handful of times, with a place among the last 16 as his best result.

At the start of 2020, he won himself a Tour Card at Q School. Already at the Players Championship 4, the Swede managed to get to the round of 16. Which is his best result at a Players Championship event.

2020 was also the first year of the covid-19 pandemic, meaning the PDC Pro Tour had to drop a lot of tournaments. PDC, however, arranged a Home Tour tournament, at which Daniel Larsson made his first ever nine darter in the PDC. He did so against Krzysztof Kciuk.

Unfortunately, Daniel Larsson lost his Tour Card after the 2021 season.

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Humphries determined to return to winning ways in New York

Luke Humphries & Peter Wright

World Champion Luke Humphries is determined to return to winning ways as he prepares to headline this weekend’s bet365 US Darts Masters in New York. Humphries will be among the star attractions when the sport's biggest names take on eight North American representatives in The Theater at Madison Square Garden on May 31 & June 1. The 29-year-old made the semi-finals on debut 12 months ago, and following a whirlwind six months - which have seen him win four PDC Premier titles and move to the head of the PDC Order of Merit - has returned to the Big Apple as the flagbearer of the sport. “Last year was a great experience, but this year I want to win it,” insisted Humphries, who is hoping to add a World Series of Darts title to his growing haul. “I’m still going to enjoy the experience, because these are fantastic opportunities that we’re very lucky to have, but my headspace is more about winning nowadays than it was last year.” This weekend’s action will mark Humphries’ first appearance since the Premier League Play-Offs, where he was denied by nine-dart sensation Luke Littler in a remarkable final. “My main goal was to make the top four and then make the final, and you can’t ask much more of yourself than that,” reflected Humphries, who averaged 102 in defeat against Littler. “I’ve been in six of the last seven major finals which is absolutely fantastic. It would have been lovely to win it, but I lost to a fantastic performance from Luke. “I think Luke deserved to be the Premier League champion. It’s 1-1 between us in major finals now and it’s an exciting rivalry to look forward to in the future.” Humphries was speaking following a morning of media commitments, which saw him appear on CBS New York alongside two-time World Champion Peter Wright. “This is a tournament I would love to win,” continued Humphries, who was also pictured alongside Wright in the skies above Madison Square Garden, overlooking the famous Empire State Building. “Madison Square Garden is such an iconic venue, so it would be really special to add this title to my mantelpiece. “We have a lot to play for over the next two to three months so I want to get back to winning ways, and this is the title out of all the World Series events that I’d love to lift.”

The bet365 US Darts Masters and North American Championship will be held on May 31-June 1 in The Theater at Madison Square Garden. For tickets, click here .

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  1. These players will lose their PDC Tour Cards after 2022/23 PDC World

    Keegan Brown, Niels Zonneveld, Geert Nentjes and Danny Baggish have virtually lost their PDC Tour Card, but with a good performance at the World Darts Championship can still get into the top-64 of the PDC Order of Merit. Nentjes is already sure of a new Tour Card because of his high ranking on the Development Tour, the youth circuit of the PDC. ...

  2. Brown & Huybrechts headline Tour Card winners as 2023 Q Schools ...

    The final day of Qualifying Schools saw 20 players claim two-year PDC Tour Cards, in addition to the seven secured across the first three days. At the Marshall Arena in Milton Keynes, 2014 World Youth Champion Brown secured an immediate return to the PDC circuit, having lost his Tour Card at the end of the 2022 campaign despite picking up a ...

  3. Fallon Sherrock misses out on PDC Tour card after early exit on last

    At the Marshall Arena in Milton Keynes, 2014 World Youth Champion Brown earned an immediate return to the PDC circuit, having lost his Tour Card at the end of the 2022 campaign despite picking up ...

  4. PDC Tour Cards: Steve Lennon and Martijn Dragt become first players to

    Former World Cup of Darts runner-up Lennon narrowly lost his Tour Card following the 2023/24 World Darts Championship but won it back with a 101.42 average in a 6-2 win over Leighton Bennett.

  5. Which PDC Players Have LOST Their TOUR CARDS In 2023

    Become a Darts Referee Member! https://www.youtube.com/channel/UC5fn0hWZBbIEuhBv6PtEC7w/joinMy new podcast! https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCZPPGB20z4JNVKz...

  6. 2023 PDC Qualifying Schools

    2023 PDC Qualifying Schools - Final entries confirmed. Over 850 players will compete in the 2023 PDC Qualifying Schools from January 9-15, with 27 Tour Cards on offer for players to secure a spot on the PDC circuit. The eyes of the darting world will descend on the Marshall Arena in Milton Keynes and the Wunderland in Kalkar next week, as a ...

  7. List of players with a 2023 PDC Tour Card

    The top 64 in the PDC Order of Merit all receive Tour Cards automatically, and those who won a two-year card in 2022 still have a valid card for 2023. The top player from the European and UK branches of the 2022 Challenge Tour and Development Tour received cards automatically. The remaining places were awarded at the 2023 Q-Schools, with the ...

  8. Corey Cadby resigns PDC Tour Card

    Corey Cadby has resigned his PDC Tour Card, quitting the professional circuit just two years after coming through Qualifying School. Cadby, 24, burst onto the scene in 2016, storming to the top of the DPA rankings and clinching a debut spot in the World Championship, as well as a clutch of World Series events. The Australian ace became World ...

  9. Which of the 27 PDC Tour Card winners from Q School will shine in 2023

    There were 27 winners of PDC Tour Cards at the recent Qualifying School and Paul Nicholson assesses which of them have the best chance of making a mark in 2023.

  10. List of players with a 2024 PDC Tour Card

    A 2024 Tour Card is needed to compete in Professional Darts Corporation ProTour tournaments. ... The top 64 in the PDC Order of Merit all receive Tour Cards automatically, and those who won a two-year card in 2023 still have a valid card for 2024. The top two players from the 2023 Challenge Tour and Development Tour received cards automatically.

  11. PDC Tour Card Holders

    The top 64 each year following the World Championship hold a one-year Tour Card, alongside players entering their second year of a two-year Tour Card. In addition, players from Qualifying School plus the top two players from the previous year's Challenge Tour and Development Tour Orders of Merit have a two-year Tour Card. 2024 PDC Tour Card Holders

  12. Players Who Have Lost PDC Tour Cards 2023 ... So Far

    Coming into the World Championship these players will have lost their PDC Tour cards and will need to go back to Q School, More players will join this list a...

  13. List of players with a 2022 PDC Tour Card

    The top 64 in the PDC Order of Merit all receive Tour Cards automatically, and those who won a two-year card in 2021 still had a valid card for 2022. The top player from the European and UK branches of the 2021 Challenge Tour and Development Tour received cards automatically. The remaining places were awarded at the 2022 Q-Schools, with the ...

  14. 2024 PDC Tour Card Holders confirmed

    Following the conclusion of the 2024 PDC Qualifying Schools, the 128 PDC Tour Card Holders for 2024 are now confirmed. 31 Tour Cards were won by players at Qualifying Schools, which took place in Milton Keynes and Kalkar from January 8-14. The Professional Darts Corporation has 128 Tour Card Holders each year. The top 64 each year following the ...

  15. Daniel Larsson

    PDC, however, arranged a Home Tour tournament, at which Daniel Larsson made his first ever nine darter in the PDC. He did so against Krzysztof Kciuk. Unfortunately, Daniel Larsson lost his Tour Card after the 2021 season. PDCNB Pro Tour Season Winner. N/A: PDCNB Pro Tour Titles. SDC Denmark: 2016: PDCNB Sweden: 2018, 2023: PDCNB Denmark: 2018 ...

  16. 2024 PDC Pro Tour

    The 2023 Tour Cards were awarded to: (64) The top 64 players from the PDC Order of Merit after the 2024 World Championship. (25) 25 qualifiers from 2023 Q-School not ranked in the top 64 of the PDC Order of Merit following the World Championship.. Corey Cadby's Tour Card was removed as he had not competed in any events during the 12 months since the previous Q-School.

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    Five players who lost their Cards at the end of 2019 made an immediate return to the PDC Tour, they are: Bradley Brooks , Adam Hunt , Alan Tabern , Wayne Jones , Dirk van Duijvenbode. Five players won Cards having previously held a Tour Card before 2019, they are: Jeff Smith , Peter Jacques , Andy Hamilton , Steve Brown , Mike De Decker.

  18. Luke Littler

    Littler won the match 10-5 to reach his second PDC major quarter-final. He lost there 10-8 to Damon Heta. European Tour. Littler qualified for the 2024 Belgian Darts Open (ET1) at the Tour Card Holder qualifiers, which was thus his first European Tour event, surpassing Radek Szagański 6-0, Mervyn King 6-3, and Maik Kuivenhoven 6-5.

  19. 2024 Players Championships 11-12 Player entries confirmed

    The two £125,000 tournaments will see a field of 128 players - comprised of PDC Tour Card Holders and PDPA Associate Members - competing for the £15,000 top prize in each event. Three-time World Champion Michael van Gerwen will headline the action, with Michael Smith, Gerwyn Price, Nathan Aspinall, Peter Wright and top seed Dave Chisnall also ...

  20. Date change confirmed for ET11-12 Tour Card Holder Qualifiers

    The Tour Card Holder Qualifiers for 2024 European Tour Events 11-12 will now be held on Saturday August 3. The qualifying double-header had originally been planned for Thursday July 4 at the Marshall Arena in Milton Keynes. However, due to the UK General Election which has been announced for July 4, the Marshall Arena is now not available.

  21. Josh Rock

    Joshua Rock (born 13 April 2001) is a Northern Irish professional darts player who plays in Professional Darts Corporation (PDC) events. He is the current Dutch Darts champion.. In his debut year at the international level, he won the 2022 PDC World Youth Championship.He is also the first player to throw a televised nine-dart finish in their debut year at the Grand Slam of Darts, achieving the ...

  22. Humphries determined to return to winning ways in New York

    World Champion Luke Humphries is determined to return to winning ways as he prepares to headline this weekend's bet365 US Darts Masters in New York. Humphries will be among the star attractions when the sport's biggest names take on eight North American representatives in The Theater at Madison Square Garden on May 31 & June 1. The 29-year ...