Pdc World Championship Betting Tips

Since making the last-64 of the World Championship a year ago, Malicdem has been competing on the Asian leg of the PDC tour. The Filipino won an event on home turf and reached the semi-finals of.

The PDC World Championship started on December 15 at Alexandra Palace in London. Undoubtedly the biggest event in the darts betting calendar, we've got a comprehensive preview that will cover everything you need to know. Read on to get some insight into the PDC World Championship betting odds.

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As regular darts bettors, the Analysts have assessed the PDC World Championship odds to find their best plays of the tournament. 2021 PDC World Championship We head to the Alexandra Palace for the 28th edition of the PDC World Championships and with it seemingly unlikely that the tournament would even go ahead eight months ago, it looks as if. World Darts Championship Betting 2021 – Odds, Tips & Predictions The PDC World Darts Championship 2021 will begin on 18 th December 2020 and run till 4 th January 2021. As ever, Alexandra Palace, lovingly referred to as ‘Ally Pally' in darts circles, will be the event's main venue. The PDC World Championship started on December 15 at Alexandra Palace in London. Undoubtedly the biggest event in the darts betting calendar, we've got a comprehensive preview that will cover everything you need to know. Read on to get some insight into the PDC World Championship betting odds.

In the simplest terms, a game of darts involves two players trying to get to a score of zero after starting on 501. Players take it in turns to throw three darts at a board placed 5ft 8” off the floor and 7ft 9.25” away from where the darts are thrown - after each turn, the score from the three darts is calculated and deducted from the remaining total.

A player can score between 1 and 60 with a single dart - giving a maximum total of 180 with each visit to the dartboard. The numbers 1 to 20 are available on the board, with an outer circle that doubles the score, an inner circle that trebles the score, a bullseye worth 50 points and an outer bullseye worth 25 points.

The first player to get to zero by “checking out” - hitting a double on the outer circle - wins the “leg”, with each set being the best of five legs and each match the best of 5, 7, 9, 11 or 13 sets as the tournament progresses.

The rules of darts are universal, but there are two main governing bodies in the sport. Until 1993, all darts players were part of the BDO - British Darts Organisation. Since then, the PDC - Professional Darts Corporation - has operated as its own separate franchise and players can choose to play in either BDO or PDC competitions.

PDC World Championship betting odds

Like any sport, there are numerous factors to consider in darts betting. While a player’s ranking is important, it is one of many statistics that can be analysed when trying to find value in the PDC World Championship betting odds.

Michael van Gerwen

Ranked number one in the world, van Gerwen has been in remarkable form of late. In amongst his 24 PDC titles, the Dutchman has won 90.95% of his 221 matches this calendar year. A 102.90 three-dart average and 45.88% checkout attempt completion are two of the main reasons for his short price to win the PDC World Championship.

Gary Anderson

Winner of both the 2015 and 2016 PDC World Championship, Scotland’s Gary Anderson can certainly perform on the big stage. His average of 97.93 has been boosted by 253 180’s this year, but one major contributor to Anderson’s outright winner odds is the fact that he’s a proven champion. Can he do it again?

Phil Taylor

Phil “The Power” Taylor is perhaps the most famous face in darts. A regular feature in the PDC World Championship betting odds, he has an incredible 14 titles to his name. Although he isn’t the dominant force he once was, Taylor’s previous experience, a 101.10 average and 77.39 win % in 2016 is reflected in his odds.

The best of the rest

Darts betting is no different to betting on any other sport. Although van Gerwen is a heavy favourite, the competition format means there could be a surprise in store. Now in round two, there is just over 30 players left in this year’s tournament, so who is likely to outperform what their odds suggest?

In amongst his 24 PDC titles, Michael van Gerwen has won 90.95% of his 221 matches this calendar year.

The eccentric Peter Wright is sometimes more about personality than performance. 'Snakebite' might represent value, but there is always a danger that the entertainer might show up instead of the darts player - something that is backed up by his poor 68.79 win % in 2016.

Dave Chisnall’s outright winner odds might come as a surprise to some. A respectable average of 97.40 and improving 39.26% checkout attempt completion make “Chizzy” a dark horse. If he gets the luck of the draw and takes advantage when the bigger players make a mistake, there could be a major shock on the cards.

The PDC World Championship is not only an entertaining spectacle for the fans in their fancy dress, it offers a great chance for those with knowledge of darts betting to make profit.

Get the best PDC World Championship betting odds at Pinnacle, where we offer the highest limits, lowest margins and always welcome winners.

Fast Facts

  • When: 15th Dec 2020 to 3rd Jan 2021
  • Where: Alexandra Palace, London
  • Watch: Sky Sports
  • Official Website:PDC Darts World Championships

The PDC Darts World Championships are the pinnacle of the darting circuit. They are the tournament that often defines a player’s career and a win will see them go down in the history books forever. Whilst darts do carry a number of ‘major’ tournaments throughout the year, all roads lead the World Championships if the truth be told.

With darts as popular as ever, we often see a number of interesting offers on the tournament. These promotions can be for both bets on the outright winner and for the individual matches. We’ll list these below as they appear as well as providing predictions on who will be champion.

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PDC Darts World Championship Betting Tips

The following tips are for the 2020/21 World Darts Championships. The tips for the 2021/22 tournament will be published closer to the start date.

It’s darts, but not quite as we know it. The PDC World Darts Championship is well known as one of the biggest and best parties in sport but, as with so much else, it’s a different story this year. Only a fraction of the usual number of fans will be allowed inside Alexandra Palace to see the best darts players in the world do what they do best, put on a show.

The Favourites

Michael van Gerwen has had a tough year by his own incredibly high standards but bookies and punters alike fancy the world number one to get it right when it matters most. MvG is available at a best price of 5/2 followed closer than ever by second favourite, Gerwyn Price. The Welshman made it to the semi finals for the first time in last year’s tournament and after adding more major events to his CV he is attracting plenty of support at odds of 9/2.

Last year’s world champion, Peter Wright, follows next at 6/1. Wright will do everything in his considerable power to make sure that he gets his hands back on the Sid Waddell Trophy but will the great showman of darts struggle to perform at his best without the usual buzz and atmosphere at Ally Pally?

Outsiders & Long Shots

Outside of the top three in the betting it’s 16/1 the field, which shows just how open things are this time around. There is a great combination of players who have already proven themselves in the World Championship and others who are yet to make the breakthrough at the very top level.

There are a whole load of tempting options in the betting. Michael Smith (16/1) has long been talked about as a future world champion, Dimitri van den Bergh (22/1) is another former youth prodigy who won his first PDC major this year and Jose de Sousa (18/1) caused one of the shocks of the season with his win at the Grand Slam of Darts.

Of the former world champions in the field, Gary Anderson (28/1), often saves his best stuff for this tournament but it does look a very big ask for Rob Cross (50/1) and Adrian Lewis (125/1). Devon Petersen (28/1) has never hit the heights of those three but he has played some excellent darts this year and could be one to watch if he gets off to a flying start.

Predictions & Tips

Michael van Gerwen is used to the pressure of being the best darts player in the world and used to the pressure of proving at the PDC World Darts Championship that he is exactly that. What he’s not used to, however, is coping with all of that without any fans to perform in front of. In a World Championship unlike any other it could pay to avoid the favourite and instead side with players who will have no problem raising their game in front of just 1,000 (mostly silent) fans.

Far from being supported by the crowd, Gerwyn Price has often had to do his winning whilst being booed and heckled every step of the way. The combative former rugby player brought some of that on himself for an overly aggressive approach in the early days of his career but he has subsequently mellowed enough to control himself up on the stage while losing none of his ability to rally himself. Price is a multiple PDC major champion and the World Championship is the next step in his journey, one he is ready to take this year.

Glen Durrant reached the quarter finals of his first PDC World Darts Championship 12 months ago and after a very impressive season in which he won the Premier League of Darts on debut he is primed to go all the way at Alexandra Palace. Durrant certainly has ample pedigree having won the BDO World Championship three years in a row so he has a better chance than his odds of 30/1 suggest.

Betting Tip – Gerwyn Price to win at 9/2

Each Way Betting Tip – Glen Durrant at 30/1

Event Stats

Current PDC Major Title Holders

TournamentMonthWinnerRunner-Up
World Championship (2021)JanuaryGerwyn PriceGary Anderson
The Masters (2020)FebruaryPeter WrightMichael Smith
The UK Open (2020)MarchMichael van GerwenGerwyn Price
World Matchplay (2020)JulyDimitri Van den BerghGary Anderson
World Series (2020 Final)SeptemberGerwyn PriceRob Cross
Premier League (2020 Final)OctoberGlen DurrantNathan Aspinall
World Grand Prix (2020)OctoberGerwyn PriceDirk van Duijvenbode
Champions League (2019)OctoberMichael van GerwenPeter Wright
European Championships (2020)OctoberPeter WrightJames Wade
Grand Slam of Darts (2020)NovemberJose de SousaJames Wade
Players Championship (2020)NovemberMichael van GerwenMervyn King

Schedule

  • Qualifying – Up to November 2020
  • Round 1 – Tuesday 15th to Sunday 20th December 2020
  • Round 2 – Tuesday 15th to Wednesday 23rd December 2020
  • Round 3 – Sunday 27th to Tuesday 29th December 2020
  • Round 4 – Tuesday 29th & Wednesday 30th December 2020
  • Quarter-Finals – Friday 1st January 2021
  • Semi-Finals – Saturday 2nd January 2021
  • Final – Sunday 3rd January 2021

About The PDC Darts World Championship

The tournament takes place at Alexandra Palace in London, which is affectionately known as ‘Ally Pally’. It hasn’t always been hosted here, however, as up until 2007 it was held at the Circus Tavern. The popularity of the sport and, in turn, the event meant that it needed to move to bigger premises to accommodate the demand for tickets.

The first PDC World championship was held in 1994, the year after a split between the two governing bodies of the British Darts Organisation and the World Darts Council occurred.

The Championship takes place over December and early January, only breaking for Christmas Day and New Year’s Day. It’s highly regarded as a Christmas stable these days, making it awash with Christmas partygoers from all over the world.

From the 2018/19 tournament, to qualify for the event you must either be in the top 32 in the world rankings, the top 32 in the Pro Tour Order of Merit or be one of 32 qualifiers from around the world which will include at least 2 female players.

Once into the tournament proper, the 96 players will take part in a straight knockout, resulting in them being whistled down to two who will take place in the final. Players are seeded depending on how they qualified and also what their world ranking was in the weeks leading up to the event. The 32 seeds will enter the competition at Round 2, with the Pro Tour and International qualifiers beginning at the first round.

The History of World Darts

In order to understand the importance of the PDC and the World Championships, it’s crucial to also have some knowledge of the split in world darts which lead to its creation.

Prior to 1993 darts had been a unified sport, with players around the country taking it seriously since the foundation of the National Darts Association in 1924. For the next few decades things remained much the same, with the disagreement that led to the sport’s fracturing not coming to fore until its popularity skyrocketed.

Whether it be the Premier League’s separation from the Football League or the split between the two branches of darts, money is so often the driving force that shapes the future of a sport. Darts had first started to hit the public conscience when the Westward TV Invitational was broadcast live to the south-east of the nation on Westward Television. Its popularity grew steadily so that by a decade later it was considered to be worthwhile enough for ITV to show the News of the World Championship live. The sport’s increasing appearance in the public eye led to Olly Croft forming the British Darts Organisation in 1973.

The BDO’s Early Years

The British Darts Organisation became the sport’s governing body, taking responsibility for the organisation of games around the country. The result was that there was now an official body that could put the sport’s agenda first and foremost in its dealings, as well as represent the players moving forward. As the 1970s progressed, darts began to grow even more in popularity and more and more events were being broadcast live to more than just the south-east or north of the country. ITV started showing the World Masters and World Cup, amongst other events, whilst the BBC began broadcasting the British Open from 1975.

This increase in television coverage, which was in large part thanks to the work of the BDO, led to some players turning professional. They were able to because they were now high-profile, household names as people had been watching them on television. Unfortunately, as the 1970s turn into the 1980s the sport was shown less and less. ITV chose to axe World of Sport in 1985, which was considered to be a bad thing for darts. It was also the start of TV companies showing fewer darts tournaments, which in turn annoyed some of the players as they felt that they were being let down by the BDO and that the organisation weren’t looking out for their interests enough.

Player Rebellion and the Formation of the WDC

The turn of some players into professionals meant that they couldn’t afford to be on television less as this would result in a reduction of their ability to bring in decent sponsorship money. As the 1980s wore on, more and more players began to question what exactly it was that the BDO was doing on their behalf. The organisation banned them from wearing sponsorship on their shirt, for example, as television companies didn’t want to give companies what they viewed as ‘free’ advertising. That was problematic for them, especially as they were receiving fewer TV appearances as it was.

Though the BDO felt that they were doing as much as they can to push the agenda of the sport of darts at a time when its more loutish nature was becoming less and less popular, they didn’t do much to appease the top players. As an example, they released a VHS of the 1992 World Championship Final without consulting with the players that took part in it. They then didn’t offer those players any money for their appearance in the VHS. In the same year, sixteen professionals left the BDO and formed their own organisation that they named the World Darts Council.

The Professional Darts Council and the Tomlin Order

Having spent a number of years pushing the BDO to change its attitude, the players that formed the WDC, which would later change its name to become the Professional Darts Council, decided to do things in their own manner. They took the British Darts Organisation head on, bolstered by the fact that all of the previous winners of the BDO World Championship had left the group to form the WDC. They all still took part in the Embassy World Championship in 1993, but the BDO’s decision to ban the players from wearing WDC insignia angered them enough to mean that that was the last tournament to take place in a unified world of darts.

From that moment on, World Darts Council members decided that they would only take part in competitions that the WDC was the governing body of, starting with their own World Championship in 1994. It was soon considered alongside the World Darts Championship and the World Darts Federation’s World Cup of Darts as one of the most prestigious trophies to win in the sport. The problem was that there was still a huge degree of animosity between the WDC and the BDO, resulting in the two of them going to court. In the end matters were decided with an out-of-court settlement known as the Tomlin Order. From then on, the BDO agree to recognise the WDC and allowed the players to choose which events to compete in.

One thing that the breakaway PDC did have over their now rivals the BDO was the biggest names in darts, which included Dennis Priestley and Phil ‘The Power’ Taylor at the time. In fact, it was Priestley who went on to win the first Championship in 1994, receiving £16,000 for his troubles. These days the winner will be looking at taking home a cheque worth £300,000 from the £1.5million prize pool.

Continued Animosity and Defections

The Tomlin order should theoretically have put an end to the animosity between the two new branches of darts, given that the World Darts Council dropped its claim to be the sport’s governing body around the world and instead recognised that this was the remit of the World Darts Federation. It was also agreed that the British Darts Organisation was the governing body for the sport in the United Kingdom. As a result of the Tomlin Order, the WDC rebranded as the Professional Darts Council, or PDC.

The agreement was supposed to encourage the freedom of darts players in the UK to choose which competitions they wanted to play in, with the Tomlin Order declaring that players from the BDO Championship and PDC Championship one year couldn’t then appear in the other competition the following year. However, this agreement was thrown into turmoil in 2006 when Raymond van Barneveld secretly negotiated a clause in his BDO contract that meant that he was able to reach the final of the BDO Championship before competing in the PDC World Championship just a week later, which was something that the Tomlin Order should’ve made impossible.

Televised PDC Darts

One of the immediate results of the split between the PDC and BDO was a deal with Sky Sports to broadcast three PDC tournaments every year, employing new techniques in their coverage to do so. Whilst the BDO’s tournaments tended to be reduced down to highlights for broadcasting purposes, Sky Sports gave the sport its own channel and showed most of the events live and in full.

Pdc World Championship Betting Tips 2019

Pdc World Championship Betting Tips

Those behind the split in darts would argue that they were right to force the issue. Sky Sports show around six PDC tournaments a year nowadays, with events broadcast as far afield as Australia, Japan and Singapore. In 2007 the PDC signed a deal with ITV, then three years later Sky Sports began showing Premier League Darts. Even the BBC, which had previously not shown any PDC events, agreed to cover the organisation in 2016 with the formation of a new tournament called the Champions League of Darts. Channel 4 weren’t to be left behind, agreeing to show the BDO World Championship from 2017 onwards.

Changing the Image of Darts

Pdc World Championship Betting Tips 1x2

One of the key things that the Professional Darts Council wanted to do was to change the image of darts as a sport. Previously seen as a blokey world of smoking and drinking, they initially wanted to employ a PR consult in order to help them improve how the sport was perceived. They also wanted to bring in a younger audience, with the sport having previously been seen as the preserve of older men. The PDC figured the best way of doing this was to shake the idea of being a sporting event alone and instead develop the notion of it being a night out. Taking a note from boxing, players enter the arena to their theme tune, with female models accompanying them to the oche.

The chance of shedding the image of darts as a booze-filled event led to nothing but iced-water being served to players at the oche, which has also helped them from avoiding dehydration in arenas where the temperature can reach more than thirty-eight degrees. Players also began to have a good relationship with the crowds, crowned by the fact that it became an unofficial rule for PDC players to have a nickname. The likes of Eric ‘The Craft Cockney’ Bristow and Phil ‘The Power’ Taylor became beloved of the darts audience, as did players such as Jamie ‘Bravedart’ Harvey and Wayne ‘Hawaii Five-O-One’ Mardle.

Interesting facts

It’s safe to say that Phil ‘The Power’ Taylor is the king when it comes to the PDC World Championships. He has won the event an astonishing fourteen times and has been involved in nineteen finals. Given that there have only been twenty-six events at the time of writing, really does hammer home his dominance.

It probably comes as little surprise to hear that Michael van Gerwen has the highest average of any player for one game, at 114.05 in 2017 versus Raymond van Barneveld. The second highest is Phil Taylor at 111.21 in 2002 against Shayne Burgess. Taylor has actually amassed an astonishing fifty-six matches averaging over one hundred, compared with van Gerwen on 28 and Gary Anderson who comes in third with twenty. There are other records worth mentioning, though, with the following being good examples:

  • As well as having won the competition more than any other player, Phil Taylor is also the most successful in terms of matches won with one hundred and ten to his name
  • He’s also lasted the longest without losing – forty-four matches
  • In 2018 there were eight hundred and twenty eight 180s in the tournament
  • Gary Anderson notched up a record seventy-one 180’s in 2017
  • Mitchell Clegg qualified for the tournament as a fifteen-year-old in 2007, going on to be the youngest player to actually compete in one at the age of sixteen years and thirty-seven days
  • Clegg didn’t reach the final, meaning that Kirk Shepherd became the youngest player to do so when he reached the final the following year at the age of twenty-one and eighty-eight days back in 2008
  • One and a half million people watched the 2015 PDC World Championship Final, which is a record
  • At the time of writing, Dennis Priestley, Phil Taylor, Raymond van Barneveld and John Part are the only players to have won both the BDO and PDC World Championships
  • John Part from Canada, Raymond van Barneveld and Michael van Gerwen, both from Holland, are the only overseas players to have won the PDC World Championship