2019 PDC World Cup of Darts


The 2019 BetVictor World Cup of Darts was the ninth edition of the PDC World Cup of Darts. It took place from 6–9 June 2019 at the Barclaycard Arena in Hamburg, Germany.
The Dutch pairing of Michael van Gerwen and Raymond van Barneveld were the reigning champions, after beating the Scottish duo Peter Wright and Gary Anderson 3–1 in the 2018 final. Although Van Gerwen was able to defend his title, Jermaine Wattimena was selected ahead of Van Barneveld for the Netherlands. However, they lost 2–1 to the Republic of Ireland in the semi-finals.
Wright and Anderson of Scotland won their first World Cup, defeating the Republic of Ireland team of William O'Connor and Steve Lennon 3–1 in the final.

Format

The tournament remained at 32 teams this year, with the top 8 teams being seeded and the remaining 24 teams being unseeded in the first round. Like last year, there are no groups in 2019 with the tournament being a straight knockout.
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: Three points needed to win the title. Two best of seven legs singles matches are played followed by a best of seven doubles match. If necessary, one or two best of seven legs singles matches in reverse order are played to determine the champion.

Prize money

Total prize money will rise to £350,000, £50,000 more than last year.
The prize money will be per team:

Teams and seedings

The competing nations were confirmed on 29 March, with the only change from 2018 being the Philippines replacing Thailand. Later on 8 May, it was confirmed that Lithuania would replace Switzerland. The teams were fully confirmed on 12 May. On 5 June, it was confirmed that China's Qingyu Zhan was to be replaced by Yuanjun Liu due to a passport issue.
The Top 8 nations based on combined Order of Merit rankings on 12 May were seeded.
Seeded nations
RankCountryEntered players
1Rob Cross and Michael Smith
2Gary Anderson and Peter Wright
3Gerwyn Price and Jonny Clayton
4
5Simon Whitlock and Kyle Anderson
6Daryl Gurney and Brendan Dolan
7Kim Huybrechts and Dimitri Van den Bergh
8Mensur Suljović and Zoran Lerchbacher

Unseeded nations
CountryEntered players
Diogo Portela and Artur Valle
Dawson Murschell and Jim Long
Xiaochen Zong and Yuanjun Liu
Karel Sedláček and Pavel Jirkal
Per Laursen and Niels Heinsøe
Marko Kantele and Kim Viljanen
Max Hopp and Martin Schindler
Dyson Parody and Antony Lopez
John Michael and Veniamin Symeonidis
Royden Lam and Kai Fan Leung
Pál Székely and János Végső
Steve Lennon and William O'Connor
Andrea Micheletti and Stefano Tomassetti
Seigo Asada and Haruki Muramatsu
Darius Labanauskas and Mindaugas Barauskas
Cody Harris and Haupai Puha
Lourence Ilagan and Noel Malicdem
Krzysztof Ratajski and Tytus Kanik
Paul Lim and Harith Lim
Devon Petersen and Vernon Bouwers
Cristo Reyes and Toni Alcinas
Dennis Nilsson and Magnus Caris
Darin Young and Chuck Puleo

Results

Draw

Second round

Two best of seven legs singles matches. If the scores were tied a best of seven legs doubles match settled the match.

Quarter-finals

Two best of seven legs singles matches. If the scores were tied a best of seven legs doubles match settled the match.

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

Three match wins were needed to win the title. Two best of seven legs singles matches followed by a best of seven doubles match. If necessary, one or two best of seven legs reverse singles matches were played to determine the champion.