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The Grand Slam of Darts is a darts tournament organised by the Professional Darts Corporation and is known as the Mr Vegas Grand Slam of Darts for sponsorship purposes.[1] The PDC used to invite the best performing players from its rival, the British Darts Organisation (which went into liquidation in September 2020). There have been two previous head-to-head matches between the champions of the two organisations and a few overseas tournaments have also featured BDO v PDC clashes, but this tournament is the first of its kind to be held in the United Kingdom. This arrangement lasted until the BDO's collapse into liquidation in 2020[2] and it is unclear whether any other organisation will be invited in future.

Mr Vegas Grand Slam of Darts
Tournament information
VenueCivic Hall (2007–17)
WV Active - Aldersley (2018–19, 2021–)
Ricoh Arena (2020)
LocationWolverhampton (2007–19, 2021–)
Coventry (2020)
CountryEngland
Established2007
Organisation(s)PDC
BDO (until 2020)
FormatLegs
Prize fund£650,000 (2022)
Month(s) PlayedNovember
Current champion(s)
England Luke Humphries

Since the 2015 edition the tournament is classified as a ranking-tournament, being a non-ranking event at previous editions.

Up until 2017, the tournament was staged each November at the Wolverhampton Civic Hall since it began in 2007. Phil Taylor won the first three finals against Andy Hamilton in 2007, Terry Jenkins in 2008 and Scott Waites in 2009. Taylor did not reach the final in 2010, losing to Steve Beaton in the quarter-finals.[3] Scott Waites won that year, beating James Wade 16–12 in the final having trailed 8–0, making him the only BDO player to win the title. Taylor reclaimed the title in 2011, defeating Gary Anderson 16–4. Raymond van Barneveld defeated Michael van Gerwen 16–14 in the 2012 final, but Taylor regained the trophy in 2013, retained it in 2014, before losing to van Gerwen in 2015. Van Gerwen then retained it in 2016 and again in 2017 before Gerwyn Price won the trophy for the first time in 2018.

In May 2018, the PDC announced that the Grand Slam of Darts trophy would be renamed in honour of the recently deceased Eric Bristow.[4]

That year, with renovations being done to the Civic Hall, the Grand Slam was moved to a new venue, WV Active - Aldersley formerly Aldersley Leisure Village, which is located around 3 miles north-west of Wolverhampton City Centre. Three Grand Slam of Darts events at Aldersley were won by Gerwyn Price (2018, 2019, 2021). In 2020, due to the COVID-19 pandemic in the United Kingdom, the event was held at the Ricoh Arena in Coventry behind closed doors, and was won by José de Sousa. The 2021 edition saw the Grand Slam return to the WV Active - Aldersley where it has been held since. In 2023, the tournament was won by Luke Humphries.

Finals

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[5]

Year Champion (average in final) Ch's
org
Score Runner-up (average in final) Prize money Sponsor Venue
Total Champion Runner-up
2007 England  Phil Taylor (101.75) PDC 18–11 England  Andy Hamilton (100.97) £300,000 £80,000 £35,000 PartyBets.com Civic Hall, Wolverhampton
2008 England  Phil Taylor (106.25) 18–9 England  Terry Jenkins (100.92) £356,000 £100,000 £40,000 PartyPoker.com
2009 England  Phil Taylor (103.94) 16–2 England  Scott Waites (94.16) £400,000 £50,000
2010 England  Scott Waites (99.86) BDO 16–12 England  James Wade (92.79) Daily Mirror
2011 England  Phil Taylor (109.04) PDC 16–4 Scotland  Gary Anderson (98.92) William Hill
2012 Netherlands  Raymond van Barneveld (95.79) 16–14 Netherlands  Michael van Gerwen (98.55)
2013 England  Phil Taylor (98.14) 16–6 Scotland  Robert Thornton (97.02)
2014 England  Phil Taylor (102.45) 16–13 England  Dave Chisnall (98.02) Singha Beer
2015 Netherlands  Michael van Gerwen (100.94) 16–13 England  Phil Taylor (102.53)
2016 Netherlands  Michael van Gerwen (98.74) 16–8 England  James Wade (90.73)
2017 Netherlands  Michael van Gerwen (102.18) 16–12 Scotland  Peter Wright (97.71) £450,000 £110,000 £55,000 Bwin
2018 Wales  Gerwyn Price (96.70) 16–13 Scotland  Gary Anderson (97.25) WV Active - Aldersley,
Wolverhampton
2019 Wales  Gerwyn Price (107.86) 16–6 Scotland  Peter Wright (96.28) £550,000 £125,000 £65,000 BoyleSports
2020 Portugal  José de Sousa (99.95) 16–12 England  James Wade (94.26) Ricoh Arena, Coventry
2021 Wales  Gerwyn Price (103.90) 16–8 Scotland  Peter Wright (91.51) Cazoo WV Active - Aldersley,
Wolverhampton
2022 England  Michael Smith (96.84) 16–5 England  Nathan Aspinall (90.94) £650,000 £150,000 £70,000
2023   Luke Humphries (104.69) 16–8   Rob Cross (103.61) Mr Vegas

Records and statistics

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As of 19 November 2023.

Total finalist appearances

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Rank Player Nationality Won Runner-up Finals Appearances
1 Phil Taylor England  England 6 1 7 11
2 Michael van Gerwen Netherlands  Netherlands 3 1 4 15
3 Gerwyn Price Wales  Wales 3 0 3 7
4 Scott Waites England  England 1 1 2 6
5 Raymond van Barneveld Netherlands  Netherlands 1 0 1 14
Luke Humphries England  England 1 0 1 4
Michael Smith England  England 1 0 1 9
José de Sousa Portugal  Portugal 1 0 1 2
8 James Wade England  England 0 3 3 15
Peter Wright Scotland  Scotland 0 3 3 10
10 Gary Anderson Scotland  Scotland 0 2 2 15
11 Nathan Aspinall England  England 0 1 1 4
Dave Chisnall England  England 0 1 1 10
Rob Cross England  England 0 1 1 7
Andy Hamilton England  England 0 1 1 6
Terry Jenkins England  England 0 1 1 8
Robert Thornton Scotland  Scotland 0 1 1 9
  • Active players are shown in bold

Champions by country

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Country Players Total First title Last title
  England 4 9 2007 2023
  Netherlands 2 4 2012 2017
  Wales 1 3 2018 2021
  Portugal 1 1 2020 2020

Nine-dart finishes

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Five nine-darters have been thrown at the Grand Slam of Darts. The first one was in 2008.

Player Year (+ Round) Method Opponent Result
England  James Wade 2008, 2nd Round 3 x T20; 3 x T20; T20, T19, D12 Scotland  Gary Anderson Lost
Belgium  Kim Huybrechts 2014, Quarter-Final 3 x T20; 3 x T20; T20, T19, D12 Netherlands  Michael van Gerwen Won
England  Dave Chisnall 2015, Group Stage 3 x T20; 3 x T20; T20, T19, D12 Scotland  Peter Wright Won
Belgium  Dimitri Van den Bergh 2018, 2nd Round 3 x T20; 3 x T20; T20, T19, D12 England  Stephen Bunting Won
Northern Ireland  Josh Rock 2022, 2nd Round 3 x T20; 3 x T20; T20, T19, D12 Netherlands  Michael van Gerwen Lost
England  Ryan Searle 2023, Group Stage 3 x T20; 3 x T20; T20, T19, D12 Northern Ireland  Nathan Rafferty Won

High averages

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Ten highest Grand Slam of Darts one-match winning averages
Average Player Year (+ Round) Opponent Result
115.19 Netherlands  Michael van Gerwen 2021, Group Stage England  Joe Cullen 5–2
114.85 Belgium  Dimitri Van den Bergh 2020, Group Stage England  Ricky Evans 5–1
114.65 England  Phil Taylor 2014, Group Stage Netherlands  Christian Kist 5–1
113.86 Belgium  Geert De Vos 2015, Group Stage Wales  Jonny Clayton 5–0
113.62 England  Michael Smith 2019, Group Stage England  Nathan Aspinall 5–1
112.66 Netherlands  Michael van Gerwen 2018, Group Stage England  Gary Robson 5–1
112.54 Scotland  Gary Anderson 2018, Group Stage England  Ian White 5–1
112.37 England  Phil Taylor 2011, 2nd Round England  Wes Newton 10–3
112.30 Wales  Gerwyn Price 2023, Group Stage Netherlands  Gian van Veen 5–1
112.16 England  Phil Taylor 2013, Group Stage England  Stuart Kellett 5–0
Five highest one-match losing averages
Average Player Year (+ Round) Opponent Result
110.99 England  Adrian Lewis 2013, Semi-Final England  Phil Taylor 9–16
108.68 England  Adrian Lewis 2016, Group Stage England  Chris Dobey 3–5
107.92 Netherlands  Michael van Gerwen 2018, Group Stage Wales  Jonny Clayton 4–5
106.70 England  Stephen Bunting 2021, Group Stage England  Ryan Joyce 4–5
106.50 Belgium  Kim Huybrechts 2015, Group Stage Netherlands  Michael van Gerwen 1–5
Different players with a 100+ match average (Updated 19/11/23)
Player Total Highest Av. Year (+ Round)
England  Phil Taylor 45 114.65 2014, Group Stage
Netherlands  Michael van Gerwen 44 115.19 2021, Group Stage
Scotland  Gary Anderson 32 112.54 2018, Group Stage
Wales  Gerwyn Price 17 112.30 2023, Group Stage
England  Michael Smith 16 113.62 2019, Group Stage
England  James Wade 15 111.71 2021, Group Stage
Scotland  Peter Wright 15 107.36 2016, Group Stage
Netherlands  Raymond van Barneveld 13 110.15 2016, Group Stage
England  Adrian Lewis 12 110.99 2013, Semi-Finals
England  Rob Cross 11 105.76 2017, Group Stage
England  Luke Humphries 9 107.04 2022, Group Stage
England  Dave Chisnall 7 109.84 2015, Group Stage
Australia  Simon Whitlock 7 108.86 2018, Group Stage
England  Scott Waites 6 103.79 2012, Group Stage
Belgium  Dimitri Van den Bergh 5 114.85 2020, Group Stage
Austria  Mensur Suljović 5 105.85 2021, Group Stage
England  Andy Hamilton 5 105.64 2008, Group Stage
Wales  Jonny Clayton 5 104.30 2021, Last 16
England  Stephen Bunting 4 106.70 2021, Group Stage
Belgium  Kim Huybrechts 4 106.50 2015, Group Stage
England  Mervyn King 4 104.31 2015, Group Stage
England  Terry Jenkins 4 103.09 2009, Group Stage
Scotland  Robert Thornton 4 102.42 2012, Last 16
England  Ian White 3 108.04 2020, Group Stage
England  Scott Mitchell 3 107.78 2016, Group Stage
England  Glen Durrant 3 106.05 2017, Group Stage
Poland  Krzysztof Ratajski 3 104.18 2020, Group Stage
Netherlands  Danny Noppert 3 103.88 2016, Group Stage
England  Keegan Brown 3 103.66 2018, Group Stage
England  Ryan Searle 3 103.59 2022, Group Stage
England  Tony O'Shea 3 102.63 2010, Group Stage
England  Ross Smith 2 107.92 2022, Group Stage
Austria  Rowby-John Rodriguez 2 104.82 2021, Group Stage
England  Nathan Aspinall 2 104.65 2019, Group Stage
England  Dean Winstanley 2 104.55 2011, Last 16
Netherlands  Wesley Harms 2 103.98 2018, Group Stage
Northern Ireland  Josh Rock 2 103.93 2022, Last 16
England  Ted Hankey 2 103.75 2010, Group Stage
Netherlands  Co Stompé 2 103.44 2009, Group Stage
England  Darren Webster 2 103.44 2017, Group Stage
England  Steve Beaton 2 101.31 2010, Last 16
Northern Ireland  Daryl Gurney 2 100.80 2019, Group Stage
Belgium  Geert De Vos 1 113.86 2015, Group Stage
Germany  Gabriel Clemens 1 110.27 2019, Group Stage
Netherlands  Roland Scholten 1 110.21 2007, Group Stage
England  Ryan Joyce 1 108.11 2021, Group Stage
England  Scott Williams 1 107.46 2022, Group Stage
England  Jamie Hughes 1 106.32 2016, Group Stage
England  Kevin McDine 1 105.79 2007, Last 16
England  Martin Adams 1 104.82 2015, Group Stage
Netherlands  Jelle Klaasen 1 104.69 2015, Group Stage
England  Dennis Priestley 1 103.53 2007, Group Stage
Wales  Martin Phillips 1 103.28 2010, Group Stage
Northern Ireland  Nathan Rafferty 1 103.09 2023, Group Stage
Netherlands  Dirk van Duijvenbode 1 102.89 2022, Group Stage
England  Wes Newton 1 102.46 2012, Group Stage
United States  Stowe Buntz 1 102.28 2023, Group Stage
Germany  Martin Schindler 1 101.66 2021, Group Stage
Wales  Jim Williams 1 101.60 2018, Group Stage
England  Colin Lloyd 1 101.55 2009, Group Stage
England  Fallon Sherrock 1 101.55 2021, Group Stage
Sweden  Magnus Caris 1 101.52 2011, Group Stage
England  Andrew Gilding 1 101.52 2018, Group Stage
England  Wayne Jones 1 101.48 2007, Group Stage
Wales  Mark Webster 1 101.43 2011, Group Stage
England  Luke Woodhouse 1 101.26 2022, Group Stage
Scotland  Ross Montgomery 1 100.96 2017, Group Stage
Netherlands  Vincent van der Voort 1 100.92 2010, Group Stage
Netherlands  Benito van de Pas 1 100.90 2016, Group Stage
England  Kevin Painter 1 100.74 2009, Group Stage
England  Mark McGeeney 1 100.40 2017, Group Stage
Canada  John Part 1 100.38 2009, Group Stage
Republic of Ireland  Steve Lennon 1 100.20 2017, Group Stage
England  Justin Pipe 1 100.08 2013, Group Stage
Portugal  José de Sousa 1 100.03 2020, Group Stage
Five highest tournament averages
Average Player Year
105.42 Netherlands  Michael van Gerwen 2015
105.12 Netherlands  Michael van Gerwen 2017
104.91 England  Phil Taylor 2014
104.89 Scotland  Gary Anderson 2013
104.20 England  Phil Taylor 2013

Previous BDO v PDC tournaments

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There have been previous tournaments in which players from both the PDC and BDO have competed. Between 1997 and 2001, several BDO players competed in the World Matchplay and the World Grand Prix – this was as a result of a 1997 Tomlin Order which allowed freedom of players to enter more events. This was later restricted from the start of 2002 onwards, when eligibility rules allowed only Professional Dart Players Association members to compete in the tournaments.

The 2005 Masters of Darts was the first tournament to feature the top players from each organisation. In 2006 and 2007, following Raymond van Barneveld's move to the PDC, the Dutch organisers of the International Darts League and World Darts Trophy invited some top PDC players to compete alongside BDO players.

Perennial participants

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As the Grand Slam is an invitational tournament for players who have reached major finals and semi-finals, or been the top of their countries' respective rankings, there is a certain degree of prestige attached to qualifying for the tournament, and even more for entrants who qualify multiple times. Gary Anderson and James Wade qualified for 15 successive tournaments between 2007 and 2021, before missing their first event in 2022.

Television coverage

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ITV screened the first four editions of the Grand Slam of Darts, which ended their 19-year absence from regular darts coverage (although they did show a one-off Clash of Champions match between Phil Taylor and Raymond van Barneveld in 1999).[6] The inaugural event saw selected first-round games, the semi-finals, and the final all screened live on ITV1 and the rest of the tournament live on ITV4 but the live coverage was moved entirely to ITV4 in subsequent years, with highlights packages being the only coverage of the event on ITV1.

The tournament proved popular on ITV4, with the 2009 event achieving nine out of the top ten places in the channel's output for that week. Viewing figures ranged from 208,000 to 435,000 with the final itself watched by 454,000.[7] ITV extended their contract with the PDC to show the tournament until at least 2010.[8]

The presenting team consisted of lead presenter Matt Smith, and analysts Alan Warriner-Little and Chris Mason (who replaced Steve Beaton in 2008). The commentating team included Stuart Pyke, who also commentates on darts for Sky Sports, boxing commentator John Rawling, and Peter Drury. Janie Omorogbe provided reporting duties and player interviews.

On 25 January 2011, it was announced that Sky Sports would broadcast the event until 2018.[9][10] Sky continues to air the event with its current deal running until 2025.

Sponsorship

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The sponsors of the event were PartyBets.com (2007) and PartyPoker.com (2008–09), websites operated by Bwin.Party Digital Entertainment, the Daily Mirror newspaper (2010), William Hill (2011–13), Singha Beer (2014–16),[11] bwin (2017–18) and BoyleSports (2019–2020). Cazoo took over as sponsors from 2021, as part of a deal where they will also sponsor the PDC World Cup of Darts and the European Championship.

References

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  1. ^ "Mr Vegas becomes title sponsor Grand Slam of Darts & Nordic Darts Masters". PDC.tv. 18 October 2023. Retrieved 4 November 2023.
  2. ^ "BDO era comes to an end as counties join UKDA". Dartsnews.com. 8 September 2020. Retrieved 6 October 2020.
  3. ^ "Taylor beaten by Beaton". Sky Sports. British Sky Broadcasting. 20 November 2010. Retrieved 21 November 2010.
  4. ^ Waters, Mike (2 May 2018). "Darts legend Eric Bristow to have PDC Grand Slam trophy named in his honour following sudden death". mirror.co.uk. Retrieved 6 September 2022.
  5. ^ "Grand Slam Of Darts Winners". Darts Database. Retrieved 5 November 2014.
  6. ^ ITV agree to cover Grand Slam Archived 2013-05-05 at archive.today This is London
  7. ^ Weekly Top 10 Programmes Archived 2014-07-18 at the Wayback Machine Broadcasters' Audience Research Board
  8. ^ ITV signs deal with PDC for three more years Archived 2008-10-22 at the Wayback Machine ITV
  9. ^ Sky Sports Snap Up Grand Slam Archived 2011-01-28 at the Wayback Machine PDC
  10. ^ "Sky Sports and PDC agree new five-year deal". Sky Sports. Retrieved 5 November 2014.
  11. ^ "SINGHA Beer Sponsor Grand Slam". PDC. Archived from the original on 20 October 2014. Retrieved 5 November 2014.
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