One80 L-style World Masters
Tournament information
Dates23–28 October
LocationCircus Tavern, Purfleet
CountryEngland
Organisation(s)BDO
FormatSets for men,
Legs for women, boys and girls
Prize fund£70,500
Winner's share£25,000 (men)
£5,000 (women)
High checkout170 England Scott Waites (stage matches)
Champion(s)
Republic of Ireland John O'Shea (men)
England Lisa Ashton (women)
Republic of Ireland Keane Barry (boys)
Republic of Ireland Katie Sheldon (girls)
«2018 2022»

The 2019 One80 L-style World Masters was a major tournament on the BDO/WDF calendar for 2019. It took place from 23 to 28 October at the Circus Tavern in Purfleet, Essex, which hosted the PDC World Darts Championship from 1994 to 2007.

Adam Smith-Neale was the reigning men's champion after defeating Glen Durrant in the previous year's final by 6 sets to 4, but lost in the Last 128 to Hannes Schnier of Austria. John O'Shea won his first major title with a 6 sets to 4 win over Scott Waites.[1] He became the third non-seeded World Master in three consecutive years. Lisa Ashton was the defending women's champion after defeating Casey Gallagher 4 legs to 2 in last year's women final. She defended her title successfully with a 5 to 4 legs final win over Anastasia Dobromyslova. The youth tournaments were won by Keane Barry and Katie Sheldon of the Republic of Ireland. It was the first time three Irish players won the Singles tournaments of the World Masters.

The tournament was beset with problems, including:[2]

  • Prizemoney was not announced in advance.
  • The tournament format was changed shortly before the event and the top-16 seeds had to play from the first round instead of receiving a bye to the televised stages.
  • Several players boycotted the event in protest at the above. Nick Kenny and Wayne Warren were among the seeds who didn't attend.
  • Other players arrived but found they were not registered as they were not aware they had to register.
  • The chairman admitted that the original draw was made with fake names, which he said was in case more players showed up.
  • The draw was then redone. Brian Cathcart, who never attended the event, was still in the draw for the last-32.
  • There was a shortage of scorers and volunteers had to be called for.
  • Participants were asked to sign a contract affirming that they would not enter the 2020 PDC World Darts Championship or its qualifiers, otherwise prizemoney might be withheld or have to be repaid. Some refused to sign and played anyway.
  • BDO chairman Des Jacklin announced that he would stand down after the 2020 BDO World Darts Championship held in January.

These irregularities led to the BDO, a founder member of the World Darts Federation, being demoted to associate status by the WDF.

The tournament was the last World Masters organised by the BDO after the collapse of the organisation in September 2020.[3] Following the tournament, the World Darts Federation announced plans to launch the WDF World Masters in 2020,[4] but due to the COVID-19 pandemic these plans were pushed back to 2021,[5] and then 2022.[6]

Men's seeds

The seedings were finalised on 10 September. For the fourth consecutive year, there were 16 seeds (a decrease from 32 between 2012 and 2015), but with a change from last year, all seeds started playing in the Last 128.

  1. Netherlands Wesley Harms (Last 64)
  2. Netherlands Richard Veenstra (Last 32)
  3. Wales Jim Williams (Last 128)
  4. England Dave Parletti (Last 32)
  5. Netherlands Willem Mandigers (Last 16)
  6. England Scott Mitchell (Last 32)
  7. England Adam Smith-Neale (Last 128)
  8. Scotland Ryan Hogarth (Last 32)
  9. Belgium Mario Vandenbogaerde (semi-finals)
  10. England Scott Waites (runner-up)
  11. England Andy Hamilton (Last 64)
  12. England David Evans (Last 128)
  13. Scotland Gary Stone (Last 16)
  14. Poland Sebastian Steyer (Last 128)
  15. England Martin Adams (Last 128)
  16. England Simon Stainton (Last 16)

Men's draw (last 32 onwards)

Last 32
25 October
(best of 5 sets)
Last 16
26 October
(best of 5 sets)
Quarter-finals
27 October
(best of 7 sets)
Semi-finals
27 October
(best of 9 sets)
Final
27 October
(best of 11 sets)
               
  England Graham Usher 85.02 3
Norway Stig Jarle Knudsen 75.99 0
England Usher 95.28 3
16 England Stainton 90.16 1
16 England Simon Stainton 81.18 3
Northern Ireland Gareth Chambers 70.25 1
  England Usher 86.74 2
9 Belgium Vandenbogaerde 90.82 4
8 Scotland Ryan Hogarth 84.00 0
Canada Jeff Smith 87.99 3
Canada Smith 97.14 2
9 Belgium Vandenbogaerde 95.93 3
9 Belgium Mario Vandenbogaerde 90.65 3
Wales Richard Eirig 85.06 1
9 Belgium Vandenbogaerde 90.04 1
Republic of Ireland O'Shea 91.55 5
5 Netherlands Willem Mandigers 81.23 3
Northern Ireland Marty Moreland 78.29 0
5 Netherlands Mandigers 90.45 1
Republic of Ireland O'Shea 97.25 3
  England Justin Hood 81.96 1
Republic of Ireland John O'Shea 78.18 3
  Republic of Ireland O'Shea 84.17 4
Northern Ireland Duff 86.00 1
4 England Dave Parletti 82.57 2
Northern Ireland Neil Duff 87.85 3
Northern Ireland Duff 93.03 3
13 Scotland Stone 91.90 1
13 Scotland Gary Stone 84.62 3
England John Mann 79.06 1
Republic of Ireland O'Shea 88.89 6
10 England Waites 86.24 4
2 Netherlands Richard Veenstra 85.64 2
Scotland Craig Owens 87.26 3
  Scotland Owens 85.50 2
England C Hamilton 82.17 3
  England Carl Hamilton 92.65 3
Slovenia Benjamin Pratnemer 85.46 0
England C Hamilton 77.70 0
10 England Waites 90.12 4
  England Joe Davis 84.63 2
England Paul Hogan 89.88 3
England Hogan 94.42 2
10 England Waites 95.48 3
10 England Scott Waites 88.41 3
England Nick Fullwell 82.63 0
10 England Waites 91.28 5
Wales Warburton 81.96 1
6 England Scott Mitchell 91.84 2
Wales Michael Warburton 96.04 3
  Wales Warburton 87.97 3
Republic of Ireland Geraghty 79.48 2
  Republic of Ireland Keith Geraghty 85.48 3
France Thibault Tricole 81.42 1
  Wales Warburton 79.16 4
Republic of Ireland Teehan 77.39 2
  England David Copley 74.53 0
Republic of Ireland Ciaran Teehan 80.52 3
  Republic of Ireland Teehan 86.54 3
Netherlands Mooijman 84.07 1
  Netherlands Roemer Mooijman 86.26 3
England Paul Harvey 79.11 1

Women's seeds

It was announced before the start of the event that the Ladies seeds were to rise from 8 to 16. No reason for the change was given.

  1. England Lisa Ashton (champion)
  2. Japan Mikuru Suzuki (Last 32)
  3. Netherlands Aileen de Graaf (Last 16)
  4. England Deta Hedman (quarter-finals)
  5. England Fallon Sherrock (Last 32)
  6. Russia Anastasia Dobromyslova (runner-up)
  7. England Lorraine Winstanley (semi-finals)
  8. England Laura Turner (Last 64)
  9. England Maria O'Brien (Last 16)
  10. England Casey Gallagher (Last 16)
  11. England Trina Gulliver (Last 128)
  12. England Paula Jacklin (Last 128)
  13. Australia Tori Kewish (Last 16)
  14. England Kirsty Hutchinson (Last 64)
  15. Sweden Vicky Pruim (quarter-finals)
  16. England Jo Clements (Last 128)

Women's draw (last 8 onwards)

Quarter-finals (best of 7 legs)
26 October
Semi-finals (best of 7 legs)
27 October
Final (best of 9 legs)
27 October
         
1 England Lisa Ashton 85.69 4
Japan Mayumi Ouchi 68.19 1
1 England Lisa Ashton 79.59 5
Japan Kasumi Sato 72.11 1
Japan Kasumi Sato 87.13 4
4 England Deta Hedman 74.55 0
1 England Lisa Ashton 85.50 5
6 Russia Anastasia Dobromyslova 82.76 4
Australia Corrine Hammond 67.37 1
6 Russia Anastasia Dobromyslova 76.86 4
6 Russia Anastasia Dobromyslova 80.09 5
7 England Lorraine Winstanley 68.43 1
7 England Lorraine Winstanley 85.89 4
15 Sweden Vicky Pruim 79.70 0

References

  1. Glennon, Michael (28 October 2019). "Master O'Shea wins to cap fine weekend for Irish darts". RTÉ.ie. Archived from the original on 2019-11-06.
  2. Confusion reigns at World Masters as fake names, a redraw and a resignation blight BDO’s oldest major
  3. "BDO Set to Fold. "It's All Over...." • Darts World Magazine". Archived from the original on 2020-09-26. Retrieved 2020-10-15.
  4. "WDF – New Ranking System and Two New Majors for 2020". World Darts Federation. 15 September 2020. Retrieved 17 January 2020.
  5. "Development of World Rankings Criteria For 2021 – WDF". World Darts Federation. 15 September 2020. Retrieved 7 October 2020.
  6. "WORLD MASTERS CANCELLED AGAIN, NEW ATTEMPT IN DECEMBER 2022". Darts News. 3 September 2021.

Sources

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