Opportunity emphatically knocks for those competing at this weekend’s German Darts Grand Prix, following a substantial spate of elite player withdrawals that has dramatically reshaped the competitive landscape.
With half a dozen seeds electing against travelling to Munich – including reigning World Champion Luke Littler and two-time winner of this very event, Luke Humphries – the door now swings conspicuously wider for others to seize a golden opportunity to etch their mark.
Ever-present on the Euro Tour this year, William O’Connor was the first on Saturday afternoon to secure his place in round two with a composed and authoritative victory over promising young Pole Sebastian Bialecki, punctuated by a majestic Big Fish checkout along the way.
The Irishman’s reward is a compelling encounter with the highest-ranked player in the field, Gian van Veen.
Last season’s European Darts Trophy runner-up Ryan Joyce also remains firmly on course for that elusive maiden continental crown, dispatching home nation qualifier Finn Behrens with consummate efficiency. Relentless, however, will almost certainly face a far sterner examination when he locks horns with Josh Rock in his next outing.
There was eventually cause for celebration for Poland this afternoon, as the nation’s number one Krzysztof Ratajski negotiated the threat posed by Thomas Lovely, thereby earning himself a meeting with Ryan Searle in what promises to be a finely balanced affair.
Someone currently revelling in life on the European circuit is Niels Zonneveld. The Dutchman, who has reached the semi-finals in each of the last two tournaments, continued his impressive trajectory by overcoming Adam Lipscombe and will now harbour aspirations of another deep and meaningful run. A meeting with compatriot Jermaine Wattimena awaits.
The Czech Republic will also be represented on Sunday after Karel Sedlacek demonstrated admirable resilience, recovering from an early 2-0 deficit to defeat Cameron Menzies. Evil Charlie has yet to progress beyond the quarter-final stage on the Euro Tour duty, having exited at that juncture on three previous occasions.
However, with several marquee names absent, this could represent a particularly auspicious opportunity for Sedlacek – although 2022 Gibraltar Darts Trophy champion Damon Heta, his next opponent, will undoubtedly be harbouring identical ambitions.Essex thrower Ritchie Edhouse delivered a polished and emphatically clinical performance, including a barrage of five maximums, as he dispatched another home nation qualifier, Kevin Troppmann, with considerable authority.
The former European Champion will now set his sights on Dutch major winner Danny Noppert.Reserve list beneficiary Andrew Gilding maximised his expected inclusion with a hard-fought victory over the high-flying Wessel Nijman, advancing to round two where he will meet Daryl Gurney.
The 25-year-old Dutchman has exploded out of the blocks in 2026, securing two Players Championship titles alongside a maiden Euro Tour triumph. However, he was unable to fully recover from a 3-0 deficit against Goldfinger, who remained resolute to produce a notable upset.
Then, bringing the curtain down on the tournament’s opening session, three-time Euro Tour champion Joe Cullen became the unfortunate and wholly unexpected casualty of the day’s most seismic upset, succumbing to Eastern European entrant Patrik Kovacs. Having established an early foothold by claiming the opening two legs, it appeared to be little more than a routine, workmanlike assignment for Cullen.
However, full credit must be afforded to the Hungarian, who exhibited admirable tenacity, digging deep and capitalising on his otherwise illustrious opponent’s uncharacteristically substandard display.It is Kovacs – the man intriguingly nicknamed The Planner – who now advances, pencilling in a compelling second-round engagement with Ross Smith.
It is a high-calibre evening line-up that lies in wait, featuring a trio of former PDC World Champions. Michael Smith, Bully Boy, opens proceedings against James Hurrell. Dutch darting icon Raymond van Barneveld faces one of the remaining home nation qualifiers in Marcel Hausotter.
Meanwhile, Snakebite Peter Wright takes on Kim Huybrechts in what promises to be a particularly tantalising encounter.
2026 GERMAN DARTS GRAND PRIX (EVENT FOUR)
Munich, Germany (4-6 April)
Saturday Afternoon Session – Round One
William O’Connor 6-2 Sebastian Bialecki
Ryan Joyce 6-1 Finn Behrens
Krzysztof Ratajski 6-3 Thomas Lovely
Niels Zonneveld 6-3 Adam Lipscombe
Karel Sedlacek 6-4 Cameron Menzies
Ritchie Edhouse 6-3 Kevin Troppmann
Andrew Gilding 6-4 Wessel Nijman
Patrik Kovacs 6-3 Joe Cullen
Saturday Evening Session – Round One
Michael Smith v James Hurrell
Dirk van Duijvenbode v Stephen Burton
Brendan Dolan v Cor Dekker
Kevin Doets v Anton Ostlund
Raymond van Barneveld v Marcel Hausotter
Peter Wright v Kim Huybrechts
Ricardo Pietreczko v Ian White
Niko Springer v Jan Schmidt
Sunday Afternoon Session – Round Two
Ross Smith v Patrick Kovacs
Jermaine Wattimena v Niels Zonneveld
Damon Heta v Karel Sedlacek
Daryl Gurney v Andrew Gilding
Ryan Searle v Krzysztof Ratajski
Danny Noppert v Ritchie Edhouse
Mike De Decker v van Duijvenbode/Burton
Dave Chisnall v M Smith/Hurrell
Sunday Evening Session – Round Two
Luke Woodhouse v Wright/Huybrechts
Josh Rock v Ryan Joyce
James Wade v Doets/Ostlund
Jonny Clayton v van Barneveld/Hausotter
Michael van Gerwen v Springer/Schmidt
Nathan Aspinall v Pietreczko/White
Martin Schindler v Dolan/Dekker
Gian van Veen v William O’Connor
—–Ends—–
Images: PDC Europe








