Scotland Look To Retain World Cup in Frankfurt

Red Dragon Darts

PETER Wright and John Henderson are aiming to retain their World Cup of darts title for Scotland as the event returns to Frankfurt.

The 2022 Cazoo World Cup of Darts begins in Germany on Thursday as the annual 32-nation festival of darts returns to Frankfurt’s Eissporthalle.

This year’s World Cup of Darts marks the 12th edition of the popular pairs event, which will see 32 countries represented by two-player teams from June 16-19.

Defending Champions:

Scotland’s Peter Wright and John Henderson are bidding to defend their crown across the four-day event at the Eissporthalle, with Wright eyeing a third World Cup triumph in four years.

The eighth seeds defeated Austria to secure a second World Cup success 12 months ago, and they will open their campaign against Hong Kong duo Lok Yin Lee & Ho Tung Ching on Friday night.

World Champion Wright retains last year’s successful pairing with Henderson, who is aiming to emulate the greatest day of his career in Frankfurt this weekend after being given the blessing of Gary Anderson to remain in the Scotland team.

“I’m buzzing,” said Henderson. “I wasn’t expecting it. Fair play to Gary for giving me the opportunity to go and retain it.

“The reception I got in Huntly [on my return] last year was phenomenal, and it gives you the taste for more, so hopefully I can enjoy it and play well. I’m really looking forward to it.

“Peter was brilliant last year. He was the captain of the team and he really did help me. I think we’ll go in with the same mentality this year, and I believe we will do well.”

Looking For A New England:

The new pairing of Michael Smith and James Wade lead the charge for top seeds England, who are eyeing a fifth World Cup crown, but a first since 2016.

Phil Taylor and Adrian Lewis led England to their previous four victories, but having scooped five titles within the last month, Smith is in confident mood ahead of their clash against Czech duo Adam Gawlas and Karel Sedlacek on Friday.

“If I can score and Wadey can hit his doubles, we’ll take some stopping, but I’m hitting my doubles and Wadey is scoring now as well,” said the US Darts Masters champion.

“It looks like it’s becoming a match made in heaven. He is a ten-time TV winner so he’s got a good head on his shoulders.

“I am finally getting there and he can keep me going hopefully, so we can push on and win that title.”

Dragons Seek More:

Gerwyn Price and Jonny Clayton will represent Wales for a fifth consecutive year, and the 2020 champions are highly-fancied to double their tally this weekend.

The second seeds headline Thursday’s opening night of first round action against the Philippines, and the World Cup harbours special memories for Clayton, who has enjoyed a meteoric rise since their 2020 triumph.

“That gave me so much confidence, it gave me belief that I can actually perform on the biggest stage,” said Clayton, a winner of four televised titles in 2021.

“We were the first Welsh players to win the World Cup and I will always remember that.

“The Welsh are very proud people, and to win something to bring back to Wales, it’s an amazing feeling. It would be a dream to do it again.”

Belgium Go Back to the Future:

Dimitri Van den Bergh and Kim Huybrechts renew their partnership for 2013 runners-up Belgium, and the fourth seeds will face 2019 semi-finalists Japan in a tricky opener.

“We have so many singles events, but playing for your country, that is only once a year, so you don’t have many opportunities for that,” admitted Van den Bergh, last week’s Nordic Darts Masters winner. “It 100 per cent means more to us.

“Obviously when you are playing as a Belgian professional, you are representing your country, but playing in the actual national shirt, you want to make the most of it.

“You see other teams going deep, you see other teams winning it. We want to be a part of that elite group and lift that title up in the air.”

P p p p pick Up A Pairing:

Four-time winners the Netherlands boast a new-look pairing in the absence of Michael van Gerwen, with UK Open champion Danny Noppert teaming up alongside Dirk van Duijvenbode ahead of their first-round clash against Brazil on Thursday.

Australian number one Damon Heta and World Cup ever-present Simon Whitlock take on Lithuania, led by Darius Labanauskas, while Northern Irish duo Daryl Gurney and Brendan Dolan – another who has played in all 11 previous World Cups – continue their bid for maiden glory.

Gabriel Clemens and Martin Schindler will fly the flag for host nation Germany in another new-look pairing, and the 2020 semi-finalists play Spain in Thursday’s penultimate first-round tie.

Last year’s runners-up Mensur Suljovic and Rowby-John Rodriguez join forces again for Austria, while Denmark and Singapore kick off this year’s showpiece, as veteran star Paul Lim makes his big stage return alongside Harith Lim.

Republic of Ireland’s William O’Connor and Steve Lennon – runners-up in 2019 – lock horns against Canada’s Jeff Smith and Matt Campbell in a compelling first round clash.

Elsewhere, 18-year-old Sebastian Bialecki, a UK Open quarter-finalist in March, will make his World Cup debut alongside Krzysztof Ratajski, as Poland play American debutants Danny Baggish and Jules van Dongen in another intriguing tie.

There are also returns for New Zealand and Switzerland, who collide on Thursday night, while Latvia, captained by ProTour finalist Madars Razma, come back into the fold to face Hungary.

The first round will take place across Thursday and Friday evening, with Saturday’s double session featuring the second round.

The quarter-finals then take place on Sunday afternoon, ahead of the semi-finals and final in the evening session.

The Cazoo World Cup of Darts will be televised on Sky Sports for UK viewers, through the PDC’s international broadcast partners, including DAZN and Viaplay, and on PDCTV for Rest of the World Subscribers.

2022 Cazoo World Cup of Darts

Schedule of Play

Thursday, June 16 (1900 local time)

First Round x8

Denmark v Singapore

New Zealand v Switzerland

Republic of Ireland v Canada

Austria v Finland

Northern Ireland v Gibraltar

Wales v Philippines

Germany v Spain

Netherlands v Brazil

Friday June 17 (1900 local time)

First Round x8

Latvia v Hungary

Poland v USA

Sweden v South Africa

Portugal v Italy

Australia v Lithuania

England v Czech Republic

Scotland v Hong Kong

Belgium v Japan

Saturday June 18

Afternoon Session (1300 local time)

Second Round x4

Evening Session (1900 local time)

Second Round x4

Sunday June 19

Afternoon Session (1300 local time)

Quarter-Finals

Evening Session (1900 local time)

Semi-Finals

Final

Draw Bracket

(1) England v Czech Republic

Latvia v Hungary

(8) Scotland v Hong Kong

Portugal v Italy

(4) Belgium v Japan

Poland v USA

(5) Australia v Lithuania

Sweden v South Africa

(2) Wales v Philippines

Austria v Finland

(7) Germany v Spain

Denmark v Singapore

(3) Netherlands v Brazil

Republic of Ireland v Canada

(6) Northern Ireland v Gibraltar

New Zealand v Switzerland

Competing Nations & Pairings

Australia – Damon Heta & Simon Whitlock

Austria – Mensur Suljovic & Rowby-John Rodriguez

Belgium – Dimitri Van den Bergh & Kim Huybrechts

Brazil – Diogo Portela & Artur Valle

Canada – Jeff Smith & Matt Campbell

Czech Republic – Adam Gawlas & Karel Sedlacek

Denmark – Vladimir Andersen & Andreas Toft Jörgensen

England – Michael Smith & James Wade

Finland – Marko Kantele & Aki Paavilainen

Germany – Gabriel Clemens & Martin Schindler

Gibraltar – Justin Hewitt & Craig Galliano

Hong Kong – Lok Yin Lee & Ho Tung Ching

Hungary – Nándor Prés & Gergely Lakatos

Italy – Guiseppe Di Rocco & Gabriel Rollo

Japan – Tomoya Goto & Toru Suzuki

Latvia – Madars Razma & Nauris Gleglu 

Lithuania – Darius Labanauskas & Mindaugas Barauskas

Netherlands – Danny Noppert & Dirk van Duijvenbode

New Zealand – Ben Robb & Warren Parry

Northern Ireland – Daryl Gurney & Brendan Dolan

Philippines – Lourence Ilagan & RJ Escaros

Poland – Krzysztof Ratajski & Sebastian Bialecki

Portugal – Jose de Sousa & Vítor Jerónimo

Republic of Ireland – William O’Connor & Steve Lennon

Scotland – Peter Wright & John Henderson

Singapore – Paul Lim & Harith Lim

South Africa – Devon Petersen & Stefan Vermaak

Spain – Jose Justicia & Tony Martinez

Sweden – Daniel Larsson & Johan Engstrom

Switzerland – Stefan Bellmont & Thomas Junghans

USA – Danny Baggish & Jules van Dongen

Wales – Gerwyn Price & Jonny Clayton

—–ENDS—–

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