NETHERLANDS OUT TO RETAIN TITLE IN CASH CONVERTERS WORLD CUP OF DARTS
THE second Cash Converters World Cup of Darts begins in Germany on Friday,
as Raymond van Barneveld and Vincent van der Voort bid to take the title back
to the Netherlands.
The tournament was introduced to great success in December 2010, with the
top two ranked players from 24 nations defying a foot of snow to compete in
north-east England.
The hosts' team of Phil Taylor and James Wade were stunned by Spanish pair
Antonio Alcinas and Carlos Rodriguez in the second round of the event as the
colourful pair went on to reach the semi-finals.
They would be denied at that stage by the Netherlands, as van Barneveld and
his then partner Co Stompe went on to take victory with a triumph against Wales
in the final.
That success is van Barneveld's only televised triumph since 2007, but after
losing in the first round of the World Championship before Christmas he is
determined to bounce back in style at the Alsterdorfer Sporthalle in Hamburg
this weekend.
"The last World Cup was a brilliant memory for me," said van
Barneveld. "I loved every minute of playing with Co and I can't wait to
play with Vincent this time.
"We're determined to keep this title. I'm practising every day and I
played really well in Spain last weekend, and this year I want to prove a lot
of people wrong - I'm not finished.
"Losing in the first round of the World Championship to James
Richardson was one of the saddest things in my career.
"I know what I can do but I was lazy last year, not practising much. I
needed two or three weeks to recover and I said to myself that now I'm going to
work hard and prove that I'm still top class."
Taylor will be partnered by World Champion Adrian Lewis in this year's
tournament, with the Stoke pair set to open their challenge against either
Canada - featuring three-time World Champion John Part - or Hungary.
"I'm excited," said Taylor. "I've not played since the World
Championship so I'm itching to get back up there, and I'm looking forward to
playing with Adrian.
"It was disappointing to lose early on in the last World Cup but this
is a new chance. Adrian's obviously in great form because he's just won the
World Championship again, and it should be good fun."
Lewis has overtaken James Wade to become world number two in the past year
to replace the left-hander in the English pairing, and is hoping to continue
his run of success in Hamburg.
"I've been so used to playing against Phil that it might take a little
bit of time getting used to playing with him!" he joked.
"I'm really looking forward to it and it would be a fantastic
competition to win, although there are some great teams out there."
The World Cup of Darts will begin on Friday afternoon with eight first round
matches which will feature the teams ranked 9-24.
Canada's John Part and Ken MacNeil play the Hungarian pairing of Nandor
Bezzeg and Kristian Kaufmann in the opening game, before Ireland's William
O'Connor and Mick McGowan play the Malaysian duo of Lee Choon Peng and Amin Bin
Abdul Ghani.
American duo Darin Young and Gary Mawson play the Philippines' Christian
Perez and Lourence Ilagan, while Austria's Mensur Suljovic and Dietmar Burger
play the New Zealand team of Warren French and Preston Ridd.
Sweden's Magnus Caris and Dennis Nilsson meet the Japanese pairing of Haruki
Muramatsu and Morihiro Hashimoto, while the South African team of Devon
Petersen and Shawn Hogan take on the 2010 semi-finalists Spain, who are again
represented by Alcinas and Rodriguez.
Finland's Petri Korte and Marko Kantele play Croatia's Boris Krcmar and
Tonci Restovic, and the final first round game sees Gibraltar's Dylan Duo and
Dyson Parody meet Denmark's Per Laursen and Jann Hoffmann.
The first round will be played in a Doubles format of the best of nine legs,
with the second round comprising Singles games to be played on Friday night and
Doubles matches on Saturday afternoon.
England play Canada or Hungary, with the winners progressing to meet either
Germany, USA or the Philippines in the quarter-finals.
The Welsh pairing of Mark Webster and Richie Burnett meet Finland or Croatia
as they bid to emulate their run to the 2010 final, when Webster was partnered
by Barrie Bates.
However, their potential quarter-final opponents would be either Scotland -
represented by Premier League champion Gary Anderson and colourful Peter Wright
- Spain or South Africa.
Number two seeds Australia, represented by Simon Whitlock and Paul
Nicholson, will play either the Republic of Ireland or Malaysia in the second
round, with the Belgian debutants Kim Huybrechts and Kurt Van De Rijck playing
Sweden or Japan.
Northern Ireland's Brendan Dolan and Michael Mansell play Gibraltar or
Denmark, with the Netherlands meeting Austria or New Zealand in their second
round tie.
The tournament will continue throughout the weekend with the quarter-finals,
semi-finals and finals played with a mixture of Singles and Doubles matches.
The event will be screened live on Sky Sports HD in the UK, on RTL7 in the
Netherlands, Fox Sports in Australia and OSN Showtime Network across the Middle
East & North Africa, and is also available outside of the UK, Ireland and
the Netherlands through LIVEPDC.TV.
Cash Converters World Cup of Darts Schedule of Play All times local (GMT+1) Friday February 3 Afternoon Session (2pm-6pm) First Round x8 Games Best of nine legs, 501 Doubles, loser throws first. Knockout between teams 9-24
First Round Order of Play Canada (John Part & Ken MacNeil) v Hungary (Nandor Bezzeg & Kristian
Kaufmann) Republic of Ireland (William O'Connor/Mick McGowan v Malaysia (Lee Choon
Peng/Amin Bin Abdul Ghani) USA (Darin Young & Gary Mawson) v Philippines (Christian Perez &
Lourence Ilagan) Austria (Mensur Suljovic & Dietmar Burger) v New Zealand (Warren French
& Preston Ridd) Sweden (Magnus Caris & Dennis Nilsson) v Japan (Haruki Muramatsu &
Morihiro Hashimoto) Spain (Antonio Alcinas & Carlos Rodriguez) v South Africa (Devon Petersen
& Shawn Hogan) Finland (Petri Korte & Marko Kantele) v Croatia (Boris Krcmar & Tonci
Restovic) Gibraltar (Dylan Duo & Dyson Parody) v Denmark (Per Laursen & Jann
Hoffmann)
Second Round Play split across Friday night & Saturday afternoon sessions Draw Bracket - to be used from Second Round onwards England (1) v Canada/Hungary Germany (8) v USA/Philippines Wales (5) v Finland/Croatia Scotland (4) v Spain/South Africa Australia (2) v Republic of Ireland/Malaysia Belgium (7) v Sweden/Japan Northern Ireland (6) v Gibraltar/Denmark Netherlands (3) v Austria/New Zealand
Evening Session (8pm-12am) 16 x Singles matches. Top ranked player from each team plays second ranked
player from opposing team. Best of seven legs, 501 Singles, loser throws first. One point awarded for each match winner.
Second Round Singles Order of Play Northern Ireland v Gibraltar/Denmark Brendan Dolan v Dyson Parody/Jann Hoffman Michael Mansell v Dylan Duo/Per Laursen
Belgium v Sweden/Japan Kim Huybrechts v Dennis Nilsson/Morihiro Hashimoto Kurt Van De Rijck v Magnus Caris/Haruki Muramatsu
Australia v Republic of Ireland/Malaysia Simon Whitlock v Mick McGowan/Amin Bin Abdul Ghani Paul Nicholson v William O'Connor/Lee Choon Peng
Wales v Finland/Croatia Mark Webster v Marko Kantele/Tonci Restovic Richie Burnett v Petri Korte/Boris Krcmar
Germany v USA/Philippines Jyhan Artut v Gary Mawson/Lourence Ilagan Bernd Roith v Darin Young/Christian Perez
Scotland v Spain/South Africa Gary Anderson v Carlos Rodriguez/Shawn Hogan Peter Wright v Antonio Alcinas/Devon Petersen
England v Canada/Hungary Phil Taylor v Ken MacNeil/Kristian Kaufmann Adrian Lewis v John Part/Nandor Bezzeg
Netherlands v Austria/New Zealand Raymond van Barneveld v Dietmar Burger/Preston Ridd Vincent van der Voort v Mensur Suljovic/Warren French
Saturday February 4 Afternoon Session (2.30pm-6.30pm) Second Round 8x Doubles matches. Best of nine legs, 501 Doubles, loser throws first. Two points awarded for each match winner. In the event of this resulting in a
2-2 tie between countries, a sudden death doubles leg will take place with the
team who threw first in the doubles match throwing first for the bull in the
sudden death leg.
Second Round Doubles Order of Play Northern Ireland v Gibraltar/Denmark Belgium v Sweden/Japan
Australia v Republic of Ireland/Malaysia Wales v Finland/Croatia Germany v USA/Philippines Scotland v Spain/South Africa England v Canada/Hungary Netherlands v Austria/New Zealand
Evening Session (8pm-12am) Quarter-Finals 4x Quarter-Final ties. Play proceeds in bracket order from the Second Round
onwards. Same format as Second Round, with Doubles match immediately following second
Singles match in each tie.
Order of Play TBC
Sunday February 5 Afternoon Session (3pm-6.30pm) Semi-Finals 2x Semi-Final ties. Semi-finals consist of four best of nine leg Singles games followed by a best
of nine leg Doubles match (if required). One point is awarded per singles match won, two per doubles. Loser throws
first. If the match finishes all square (3-3), a sudden-death Doubles leg will be
played with a bull-up on stage to determine who throws first. Once a team has
an unassailable lead, the tie is over and no further matches shall be played.
Order of Play TBC
Evening Session
(8pm-11.30pm) Final Same format as semi-finals but matches played over the best of 15 legs.
Date : 02-02-2012
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