2015 PDC World Darts Championship


The 2015 William Hill World Darts Championship was the 22nd World Championship organised by the Professional Darts Corporation since it separated from the British Darts Organisation. The event was held at the Alexandra Palace, London between 18 December 2014 and 4 January 2015.
Michael van Gerwen was the defending champion, having won his first World Championship title in 2014, but he lost 6–3 to Gary Anderson in the semi-finals. Anderson won the title by beating 16-time World Champion Phil Taylor 7–6 in the final.
Adrian Lewis threw the event's only nine-dart finish in his third round match with Raymond van Barneveld. John Michael and Boris Koltsov became the first players from Greece and Russia respectively to play in the first round of a PDC World Championship. Cristo Reyes became the first Spanish player to reach the last 16 in the history of the event.

Format and qualifiers

The tournament featured 72 players. The top 32 players on the PDC Order of Merit on 2 December 2014 were seeded for the tournament. They were joined by the 16 highest non-qualified players from the Pro Tour Order of Merit, based on the events played on the 2014 PDC Pro Tour.
These 48 players were joined by two PDPA qualifiers, the highest ranked non-qualified player on the PDC Challenge Tour Order of Merit, and 21 international players: the four highest names on the European Order of Merit not already qualified, and 17 further international qualifiers determined by the PDC and PDPA. Some of the international players, such as the four from the European Order of Merit, and the top American and Australian players were entered straight into the first round, while others, having won qualifying events in their countries, were entered into the preliminary round.
The field was set on 1 December 2014. John Michael became the first Greek player to play in the PDC World Championship.

Qualifiers

Order of Merit
Pro Tour
  1. Andrew Gilding
  2. Darren Webster
  3. Benito van de Pas
  4. Christian Kist
  5. Jamie Lewis
  6. Ronny Huybrechts
  7. Wayne Jones
  8. Gerwyn Price
  9. John Henderson
  10. Keegan Brown
  11. David Pallett
  12. Joe Cullen
  13. Kyle Anderson
  14. Jyhan Artut
  15. Mickey Mansell
European Order of Merit
First Round Qualifiers
  1. Mensur Suljović
  2. Max Hopp
  3. Ryan de Vreede
PDPA Qualifier
First Round Qualifier
Preliminary Round Qualifier
International Qualifiers
First Round Qualifiers
Preliminary Round Qualifiers
The 2015 World Championship featured a prize fund of at least £1,250,000 - an increase of £200,000 from the 2014 tournament.
The prize money is allocated as follows:

Results

Preliminary round

The preliminary round was played in a first to four legs format. One match was played per session with the winners playing their first round matches later on the same day. The draw was held on 30 November 2014, two days before the main draw. Gurney achieved the highest average in the history of the Preliminary round.
PlayerScorePlayerAv.
89.90Ian Perez 0–4 Cristo Reyes93.94
67.11Kim Viljanen 1–4 Sascha Stein91.30
93.76Scott MacKenzie 3–4 Daryl Gurney96.11
65.09Mark McGrath 0–4 Scott Kirchner83.50
79.27Boris Koltsov 4–2 Haruki Muramatsu75.69
83.77Jani Haavisto 1–4 John Michael94.82
84.68Nolan Arendse 4–0 Alex Hon79.22
82.77Jermaine Wattimena 3–4 Robert Marijanović76.36

Exhibition

The event also included a single-leg exhibition between two England cricket teammates – fast bowler James Anderson and opening batsman and Test captain Alastair Cook.
PlayerScorePlayerAv.
40.42James Anderson 0-1 Alastair Cook41.75

Last 64

Final

Statistics

Representation from different countries

This table shows the number of players by country in the World Championship, the total number including the preliminary round.

Broadcasting

The tournament was available in the following countries on these channels:
CountryChannel
United Kingdom
Ireland
Sky Sports
NetherlandsRTL7
GermanySport1/Sport1+
DenmarkTV3 Sport1/TV3 Sport2
Australia
Italy
Fox Sports
New ZealandSky Sport
RomaniaSport TV
Czech Republic
Slovakia
Hungary
Sport TV
OSN
Bulgaria
Scandinavia
Baltic states
Viasat

Sky Sports 3 was renamed as Sky Sports Darts for the duration of the tournament. The channel's coverage of the event was later named the Best Sports of Live Event Coverage at the Broadcast Digital Awards.