2018 PDC World Matchplay- Blackpool- 21st-29th July 2018
- ssjsa
- International
- Posts: 24565
- Joined: Wed Feb 09, 2011 5:02 pm
- Location: uddingston, glasgow
- Contact:
Re: 2018 PDC World Matchplay- Blackpool- 21st-29th July 2018
Peter Wright interview yesterday.
2023 World Championship Prediction Competition winner
2019 Q School Prediction Competition winner
PL 2019 Weeks 9-16 Prediction Competition winner
PL 2019 Prediction Competition Cash Prize winner
Re: 2018 PDC World Matchplay- Blackpool- 21st-29th July 2018
Must say, that I like that 1 play-by-play announcer + 2 former-pro-setup in the box, and Taylor is in deed quite good.
Always love the 3-man-teams when it comes to NBA basketball (e.g. Followill/Harper/Wade for the mavs or Jackson/van Gundy/Breen for ESPN/ABC), if there is a dull phase in the game itself at some point they always find something interesting or funny with that many guys around.
Always love the 3-man-teams when it comes to NBA basketball (e.g. Followill/Harper/Wade for the mavs or Jackson/van Gundy/Breen for ESPN/ABC), if there is a dull phase in the game itself at some point they always find something interesting or funny with that many guys around.
- ssjsa
- International
- Posts: 24565
- Joined: Wed Feb 09, 2011 5:02 pm
- Location: uddingston, glasgow
- Contact:
Re: 2018 PDC World Matchplay- Blackpool- 21st-29th July 2018
Snakebite not firing on all cylinders yet, but think he will kick on from here.
Would be no surprise to see Mensur 9-6 up at the next break.
Would be no surprise to see Mensur 9-6 up at the next break.
2023 World Championship Prediction Competition winner
2019 Q School Prediction Competition winner
PL 2019 Weeks 9-16 Prediction Competition winner
PL 2019 Prediction Competition Cash Prize winner
Re: 2018 PDC World Matchplay- Blackpool- 21st-29th July 2018
Haha I saw what you originally wrotessjsa wrote:Snakebite not firing on all cylinders yet, but think he will kick on from here.
Would be no surprise to see Mensur 9-6 up at the next break.
Big Jock Knew
- ssjsa
- International
- Posts: 24565
- Joined: Wed Feb 09, 2011 5:02 pm
- Location: uddingston, glasgow
- Contact:
Re: 2018 PDC World Matchplay- Blackpool- 21st-29th July 2018
Off course you did, hence my smiley.Ginge wrote:Haha I saw what you originally wrotessjsa wrote:Snakebite not firing on all cylinders yet, but think he will kick on from here.
Would be no surprise to see Mensur 9-6 up at the next break.
2023 World Championship Prediction Competition winner
2019 Q School Prediction Competition winner
PL 2019 Weeks 9-16 Prediction Competition winner
PL 2019 Prediction Competition Cash Prize winner
Re: 2018 PDC World Matchplay- Blackpool- 21st-29th July 2018
Daisy Mac taking in the Blackpool heat.
- ssjsa
- International
- Posts: 24565
- Joined: Wed Feb 09, 2011 5:02 pm
- Location: uddingston, glasgow
- Contact:
Re: 2018 PDC World Matchplay- Blackpool- 21st-29th July 2018
Stats from TheRedBit.
Peter Wright 6-9 Mensur Suljovic
Average:
90.30 - Wright
92.21 - Suljovic
First 9:
93.40 - Wright
100.64 - Suljovic
Doubles:
54.55% - Wright
45.00% - Suljovic
180s
0 - Wright
2 - Suljovic
Peter Wright 6-9 Mensur Suljovic
Average:
90.30 - Wright
92.21 - Suljovic
First 9:
93.40 - Wright
100.64 - Suljovic
Doubles:
54.55% - Wright
45.00% - Suljovic
180s
0 - Wright
2 - Suljovic
2023 World Championship Prediction Competition winner
2019 Q School Prediction Competition winner
PL 2019 Weeks 9-16 Prediction Competition winner
PL 2019 Prediction Competition Cash Prize winner
Re: 2018 PDC World Matchplay- Blackpool- 21st-29th July 2018
A note to Fling - read the score at the top of this postssjsa wrote:Stats from TheRedBit.
Peter Wright 6-9 Mensur Suljovic
Average:
90.30 - Wright
92.21 - Suljovic
First 9:
93.40 - Wright
100.64 - Suljovic
Doubles:
54.55% - Wright
45.00% - Suljovic
180s
0 - Wright
2 - Suljovic
Big Jock Knew
Re: 2018 PDC World Matchplay- Blackpool- 21st-29th July 2018
Would rather have Taylor as the pundit/commentator than Mardle. Hes suprised me tbh with how good he's been
Part is still the best tho imo
Part is still the best tho imo
Re: 2018 PDC World Matchplay- Blackpool- 21st-29th July 2018
Hope they use this style of comms more in the future its been good to listen Part and Taylors take on the game without any silly loud shouting and talking nonesense like a few others doDuterprat wrote:Must say, that I like that 1 play-by-play announcer + 2 former-pro-setup in the box, and Taylor is in deed quite good.
Always love the 3-man-teams when it comes to NBA basketball (e.g. Followill/Harper/Wade for the mavs or Jackson/van Gundy/Breen for ESPN/ABC), if there is a dull phase in the game itself at some point they always find something interesting or funny with that many guys around.
- ssjsa
- International
- Posts: 24565
- Joined: Wed Feb 09, 2011 5:02 pm
- Location: uddingston, glasgow
- Contact:
Re: 2018 PDC World Matchplay- Blackpool- 21st-29th July 2018
Not been the best of matches quality wise, but a lot on the line for both players.
Snakebite will be the happier of the two at 10-10, but it will only take one of them to go on a run of 3/4 legs at the standard they are both capable of to decide this match.
For me Mensur will go on and win this.
Hi Ginge
Snakebite will be the happier of the two at 10-10, but it will only take one of them to go on a run of 3/4 legs at the standard they are both capable of to decide this match.
For me Mensur will go on and win this.
Hi Ginge
2023 World Championship Prediction Competition winner
2019 Q School Prediction Competition winner
PL 2019 Weeks 9-16 Prediction Competition winner
PL 2019 Prediction Competition Cash Prize winner
- ssjsa
- International
- Posts: 24565
- Joined: Wed Feb 09, 2011 5:02 pm
- Location: uddingston, glasgow
- Contact:
Re: 2018 PDC World Matchplay- Blackpool- 21st-29th July 2018
For me, this has been a disappointing semi final.
Wright has been phenomenal in patches this week, but has been all over the place tonight.
Mensur has been no better than ordinary, yet still leads 14-11.
Wright has been phenomenal in patches this week, but has been all over the place tonight.
Mensur has been no better than ordinary, yet still leads 14-11.
2023 World Championship Prediction Competition winner
2019 Q School Prediction Competition winner
PL 2019 Weeks 9-16 Prediction Competition winner
PL 2019 Prediction Competition Cash Prize winner
- ssjsa
- International
- Posts: 24565
- Joined: Wed Feb 09, 2011 5:02 pm
- Location: uddingston, glasgow
- Contact:
Re: 2018 PDC World Matchplay- Blackpool- 21st-29th July 2018
2018 BetVictor World Matchplay
Schedule of Play
Saturday July 28 (7pm)
Semi-Finals
Peter Wright (88.68) 13 (33) 17 (90.16) Mensur Suljovic
Jeffrey de Zwaan v Gary Anderson
Schedule of Play
Saturday July 28 (7pm)
Semi-Finals
Peter Wright (88.68) 13 (33) 17 (90.16) Mensur Suljovic
Jeffrey de Zwaan v Gary Anderson
2023 World Championship Prediction Competition winner
2019 Q School Prediction Competition winner
PL 2019 Weeks 9-16 Prediction Competition winner
PL 2019 Prediction Competition Cash Prize winner
- ssjsa
- International
- Posts: 24565
- Joined: Wed Feb 09, 2011 5:02 pm
- Location: uddingston, glasgow
- Contact:
Re: 2018 PDC World Matchplay- Blackpool- 21st-29th July 2018
Christopher Kempf, the statistical analyst of the PDC, takes a look at Jeffrey de Zwaan's magnificent run at the BetVictor World Matchplay.
If you only follow darts' big televised events, Jeffrey de Zwaan's name may not have been very familiar to you before the BetVictor World Matchplay.
Coming into this year, De Zwaan's only win on TV had come in meaningless fashion at the 2017 Grand Slam, in which he beat Chisnall by a margin too small to prevent him from being eliminated from his first-round group.
Unable to remain among the PDC's top 64 players by the end of that year, he lost his PDC Tour Card in January and had to regain it at Qualifying School.
The 22-year-old Dutchman, while still very much in the earliest stages of his career, had very little on his CV to indicate great promise in long-format televised darts.
Victory over Michael van Gerwen at the UK Open was an indication of De Zwaan's potential as he braved the winter storm with a brilliant upset in Minehead.
And after a 16-8 thrashing of world number nine Dave Chisnall, however, the darts world is very much in awe of his impeccably smooth throw, focus under pressure and world-class accuracy around the board.
Drawing comparisons to Dutch masters Michael van Gerwen and Raymond van Barneveld, De Zwaan is not only emulating the performances one would expect from those two, but is within reach of the glory that those two have so often attained.
Even before the World Matchplay began, Van Gerwen would have realized how difficult his first-round draw would be, despite his adversary's lowly #68 ranking in the world.
After all, he had already lost to him over the same format (best of 19 legs) at the UK Open in March.
But with his highest year-to-date average (94.5), 180s rate (0.314 per leg), and doubles percentage (42.4%), all ranking before the World Matchplay as the best among the unseeded players at the tournament, De Zwaan's tournament success seems almost obvious in retrospect as it was well suited to take advantage of a subpar Van Gerwen performance.
The Jeffrey de Zwaan of 2017 - erratic and inconsistent - has suddenly and without warning transformed into a completely new player.
Jeffrey de Zwaan circa 2018 has nearly achieved the enviable distinction of having hit a majority of his doubles thus far this year.
Contributing to this is his outrageous accuracy on doubles 16 (60%) and eight (80%). Of the other World Matchplay contestants, only Peter Wright has a better record than De Zwaan's 52% on the doubles.
De Zwaan has raised his percentage accuracy on treble 20 above the 40% mark, but it is on treble 19 that De Zwaan has exhibited truly world-class performance.
In his first three Blackpool contests, De Zwaan's darts have found the treble 19 bed 49.6% of the time - a percentage achieved only by Michael van Gerwen in the long run.
With 47 140s in total in this tournament (0.78 per leg - a level on par with the game's biggest 140 hitters) and a first-nine-dart average of 106.35, putting him in position to reach a finish after 9.3 darts, on average, only a select few have been able to keep up with that rate of scoring.
In 24 thrilling legs of darts in the quarter-finals, De Zwaan withstood an early, murderously accurate (110+ average) barrage of darts from Chisnall, minimizing the damage in the first and second five-leg sessions and wearing down the St Helens star in the long run.
By winning 13 of his 16 legs in 15 darts or less, De Zwaan forced Chisnall to win legs in as many or fewer,
Moreover, three of De Zwaan's legs won in four visits to the board all came against the throw, setting a challenge to his opponent - hold throw with 12 darts or less - to which Chisnall could not rise on that night.
With nine-dart hero Gary Anderson looming large in the semi-finals, De Zwaan will be looking to complete more of the bullseye checkouts (0 in 4 attempts on stage this year) that will be essential to pinching legs from the extremely heavy scoring of the Scot, and improve his second-dart treble 20 percentage (only 36.7% - below even his first-dart percentage).
De Zwaan's 94 finish to beat Adrian Lewis saved the match at the last moment, but his averages have trailed off in the final legs of his matches this past week - against a man who contested a 36-leg marathon of a match, this could spell trouble.
But recall that these are but minor tweaks, and that if De Zwaan can only maintain the level of production he has demonstrated in the tournament so far, he has come 99% of the way to greatness in his still-brief career.
One additional step will make him almost invincible.
If you only follow darts' big televised events, Jeffrey de Zwaan's name may not have been very familiar to you before the BetVictor World Matchplay.
Coming into this year, De Zwaan's only win on TV had come in meaningless fashion at the 2017 Grand Slam, in which he beat Chisnall by a margin too small to prevent him from being eliminated from his first-round group.
Unable to remain among the PDC's top 64 players by the end of that year, he lost his PDC Tour Card in January and had to regain it at Qualifying School.
The 22-year-old Dutchman, while still very much in the earliest stages of his career, had very little on his CV to indicate great promise in long-format televised darts.
Victory over Michael van Gerwen at the UK Open was an indication of De Zwaan's potential as he braved the winter storm with a brilliant upset in Minehead.
And after a 16-8 thrashing of world number nine Dave Chisnall, however, the darts world is very much in awe of his impeccably smooth throw, focus under pressure and world-class accuracy around the board.
Drawing comparisons to Dutch masters Michael van Gerwen and Raymond van Barneveld, De Zwaan is not only emulating the performances one would expect from those two, but is within reach of the glory that those two have so often attained.
Even before the World Matchplay began, Van Gerwen would have realized how difficult his first-round draw would be, despite his adversary's lowly #68 ranking in the world.
After all, he had already lost to him over the same format (best of 19 legs) at the UK Open in March.
But with his highest year-to-date average (94.5), 180s rate (0.314 per leg), and doubles percentage (42.4%), all ranking before the World Matchplay as the best among the unseeded players at the tournament, De Zwaan's tournament success seems almost obvious in retrospect as it was well suited to take advantage of a subpar Van Gerwen performance.
The Jeffrey de Zwaan of 2017 - erratic and inconsistent - has suddenly and without warning transformed into a completely new player.
Jeffrey de Zwaan circa 2018 has nearly achieved the enviable distinction of having hit a majority of his doubles thus far this year.
Contributing to this is his outrageous accuracy on doubles 16 (60%) and eight (80%). Of the other World Matchplay contestants, only Peter Wright has a better record than De Zwaan's 52% on the doubles.
De Zwaan has raised his percentage accuracy on treble 20 above the 40% mark, but it is on treble 19 that De Zwaan has exhibited truly world-class performance.
In his first three Blackpool contests, De Zwaan's darts have found the treble 19 bed 49.6% of the time - a percentage achieved only by Michael van Gerwen in the long run.
With 47 140s in total in this tournament (0.78 per leg - a level on par with the game's biggest 140 hitters) and a first-nine-dart average of 106.35, putting him in position to reach a finish after 9.3 darts, on average, only a select few have been able to keep up with that rate of scoring.
In 24 thrilling legs of darts in the quarter-finals, De Zwaan withstood an early, murderously accurate (110+ average) barrage of darts from Chisnall, minimizing the damage in the first and second five-leg sessions and wearing down the St Helens star in the long run.
By winning 13 of his 16 legs in 15 darts or less, De Zwaan forced Chisnall to win legs in as many or fewer,
Moreover, three of De Zwaan's legs won in four visits to the board all came against the throw, setting a challenge to his opponent - hold throw with 12 darts or less - to which Chisnall could not rise on that night.
With nine-dart hero Gary Anderson looming large in the semi-finals, De Zwaan will be looking to complete more of the bullseye checkouts (0 in 4 attempts on stage this year) that will be essential to pinching legs from the extremely heavy scoring of the Scot, and improve his second-dart treble 20 percentage (only 36.7% - below even his first-dart percentage).
De Zwaan's 94 finish to beat Adrian Lewis saved the match at the last moment, but his averages have trailed off in the final legs of his matches this past week - against a man who contested a 36-leg marathon of a match, this could spell trouble.
But recall that these are but minor tweaks, and that if De Zwaan can only maintain the level of production he has demonstrated in the tournament so far, he has come 99% of the way to greatness in his still-brief career.
One additional step will make him almost invincible.
2023 World Championship Prediction Competition winner
2019 Q School Prediction Competition winner
PL 2019 Weeks 9-16 Prediction Competition winner
PL 2019 Prediction Competition Cash Prize winner
-
- County Player
- Posts: 2719
- Joined: Wed May 29, 2013 4:28 pm
Re: 2018 PDC World Matchplay- Blackpool- 21st-29th July 2018
Delighted for Mensur, well done to him and hope he plays much, much better in the final tomorrow.
The worst I've seen Peter play since he made that 2014 World final, an 88 average in a semi-final and 13 from 35 doubles completely contradicts everything Peter is nearly always about. Just one of those nights. He'll be back, as always.
The worst I've seen Peter play since he made that 2014 World final, an 88 average in a semi-final and 13 from 35 doubles completely contradicts everything Peter is nearly always about. Just one of those nights. He'll be back, as always.
- ssjsa
- International
- Posts: 24565
- Joined: Wed Feb 09, 2011 5:02 pm
- Location: uddingston, glasgow
- Contact:
Re: 2018 PDC World Matchplay- Blackpool- 21st-29th July 2018
It's Ando time.
C'mon Gary.
C'mon Gary.
2023 World Championship Prediction Competition winner
2019 Q School Prediction Competition winner
PL 2019 Weeks 9-16 Prediction Competition winner
PL 2019 Prediction Competition Cash Prize winner
-
- Brass Darts
- Posts: 48
- Joined: Sun Oct 08, 2017 6:36 pm
Re: 2018 PDC World Matchplay- Blackpool- 21st-29th July 2018
Didn't Peter say something like "no great players anymore"? Ah, I see...another major NOT wone by Wright.ssjsa wrote:2018 BetVictor World Matchplay
Schedule of Play
Saturday July 28 (7pm)
Semi-Finals
Peter Wright (88.68) 13 (33) 17 (90.16) Mensur Suljovic
Jeffrey de Zwaan v Gary Anderson
- ssjsa
- International
- Posts: 24565
- Joined: Wed Feb 09, 2011 5:02 pm
- Location: uddingston, glasgow
- Contact:
Re: 2018 PDC World Matchplay- Blackpool- 21st-29th July 2018
Stats from TheRedBit.
- Attachments
-
- IMG_20180728_212241.jpg (72.8 KiB) Viewed 1659 times
2023 World Championship Prediction Competition winner
2019 Q School Prediction Competition winner
PL 2019 Weeks 9-16 Prediction Competition winner
PL 2019 Prediction Competition Cash Prize winner
- ssjsa
- International
- Posts: 24565
- Joined: Wed Feb 09, 2011 5:02 pm
- Location: uddingston, glasgow
- Contact:
Re: 2018 PDC World Matchplay- Blackpool- 21st-29th July 2018
In my disappointment of such a poor semi final, forgot I have now won my first bet in this year's Matchplay having bet on Mensur E/W at 33/1.
2023 World Championship Prediction Competition winner
2019 Q School Prediction Competition winner
PL 2019 Weeks 9-16 Prediction Competition winner
PL 2019 Prediction Competition Cash Prize winner
-
- County Player
- Posts: 2719
- Joined: Wed May 29, 2013 4:28 pm
Re: 2018 PDC World Matchplay- Blackpool- 21st-29th July 2018
He was kind of including himself, and by the way apart from MVG & himself, the consistency of the rest of the PDC active roster has been up and down for years now, so he has a point.Chef from Sweden wrote:Didn't Peter say something like "no great players anymore"? Ah, I see...another major NOT wone by Wright.ssjsa wrote:2018 BetVictor World Matchplay
Schedule of Play
Saturday July 28 (7pm)
Semi-Finals
Peter Wright (88.68) 13 (33) 17 (90.16) Mensur Suljovic
Jeffrey de Zwaan v Gary Anderson