Thursday, 13 November 2025

WDF worlds thoughts

Oh boy, this is going to be super happy fun times given the PDC took out an additional 32 players from circulation, yes half the additions will be from their own structure and not available to play WDF anyway, but this isn't nice. Numbers are year long legs won/lost in database and yearly scoring accordingly.

Jimmy van Schie (163-131, 89.30) v Alex Williams (13-19, 76.31) or Romeo Grbavac (2-9, 96.00) - Not really seen much of anything out of Romeo since what was a decent worlds showing last year, albeit in convincing defeat, maybe Alex has a bit less ring rust (got to guess Grbavac got in on events not on Dart Connect) but I think there's probably a decent differential in quality here. Both in the first round game, and the second, where Jimmy should have few problems.

Paul Krohne (14-27, 86.61) v Marko Kantele (89-86, 82.33) or Dalibor Smolik (3-6, 88.52) - Few familiar names here. Dalibor I assume popped up from getting through an ET qualifier, those aren't awful numbers so got to assume he's got something about him. Marko has been around forever and knows what he's doing, while Paul's a moderately new name but mainly through getting a card, giving it back, and it actually working for him. This is a really hard section to call.

Corne Groeneveld (31-17, 83.33) v Ryan Hogarth (17-23, 81.90) or Jonas Masalin (39-32, 86.98) - Interesting one. Corne's been showing up in quite a few WDF events over the past couple of years, but the numbers don't seen convincing, but there's some value in having got wins on the board. Hogarth showed up a few years back for having got deep in some events but never really kicked on, while Masalin is someone we've seen on the SDC circuit with respectable results, and may well be better than Hogarth as of right now, and could well have the game to push Corne - should he get there.

Stefan Schroder (no data) v Shane McGuirk (80-42, 88.78) or Petri Rasmus (0-5, 79.43) - Such a silly section where the defending champ enters in the preliminary round. Rasmus isn't a completely unknown name but certainly not a big name from the area, while Schroder getting the ninth seed is extremely bizarre, can only assume he binked something big that wasn't on DC. Still, got to look at Shane to get through here regardless of Schroder's pedigree.

James Beeton (72-77, 84.87) v Dennis Nilsson (26-34, 79.33) or Shane Sakchekapo (no data) - Now we get to the first player I have never heard of. Know nothing about Shane. As such, can't look past Dennis, then we get a real interesting one between a young player we've been tracking for a while, and a veteran who can up his game on this sort of stage. Would think James would have the edge, but it not be a trivial game.

Liam Maendl-Lawrance (51-66, 80.25) v Caleb Hope (no data) or Darren Johnson (13-19, 78.03) - And we go two for two in consecutive sections. No idea who Hope is. Johnson has all the experience in the world but how much he still has in the tank at this stage is in question. How much he will need is also in question. Liam we've seen for a couple of years, this year seems quieter but is still clearly a competent if deliberate operator, and ought to have the quality to require Darren to up his game to get through.

Benjamin Pratnemer (27-32, 84.95) v Karl Schaefer (26-28, 81.48) or Daniel Bauerdick (10-11, 79.81) - Don't know a great deal about either of these first round players. Karl's numbers seem a tad better although over a limited sample, and I think that he's probably playing a higher standard of player in general which might give him the edge, but I can't look past Pratnemer, clearly doing enough at a decent level to get the seeding and with decent results in the past.

Dave Pallett (55-61, 83.58) v Kevin Luke (19-21, 78.92) or Sybren Gijbels (26-31, 80.24) - Back to players we know stuff about. Kevin's been around on the US circuit for a while, albeit being more or less a player making up the numbers when it gets to the higher levels of that circuit, ahile Gijbels has shown flashes on the Euro Tour and in the WDF events so is probably the round one pick. Pallett's done a nice job of reshaping his career after being in the PDC for quite some time and still has the quality to put aside either of these, at least you'd think so.

Jason Brandon (116-128, 84.04) v Mitchell Lawrie (38-19, 94.15) or Tomoya Maruyama (3-4, 87.03) - Much as it was the Australians last year who were severely overseeded, this year it might be the Americans. Not that Jason is a bad player, but he's not a number 2 quality player (seeding, not that sort of number 2). This seems quite trivial to call, Maruyama I've never heard of despite him being in my database, Lawrie is the next big thing, and barring any sort of big stage meltdown this should be the exciting young Scot's to take.

Andy Davidson (13-11, 84.86) v Bradley Kirk (7-11, 78.21) or Jeff Springer (unclear) - I really don't know if Jeff Springer and Jeff Springer Jr are distinct players. It's really something I should get to the bottom of. Whichever way we look at Jeff, he'll likely have just enough to see off Kirk, who's a name we've seen around for a while but nothing more than just a name we've seen around for a while, and Davidson, who again seems somewhat unspectacular, might just be that bit better again.

Matt Clark (7-17, 81.03) v Vince Tipple (9-3, 81.86) or Haruki Muramatsu (21-24, 85.19) - Can't really look past Haruki here, who has a wealth of experience and will be perfectly comfortable with either of these. Tipple must have binked a silver event somewhere to get that won-loss record, but while not an unfamiliar name has a feel of making up the numbers, while Clark has a huge amount of experience but whether it can translate into wins at this level is very much in question.

Francois Schweyen (64-62, 83.77) v Brian Raman (48-36, 86.99) or Jeffrey Sparidaans (97-91, 86.37) - This is a super interesting section of the draw featuring a bunch of good European players. That first round match could legitimately have been a quarter final, Raman and Sparidaans both being ex card holders with legitimate WDF credentials that'll be too hard to call. Schweyen completes the section and is certainly no bad player but I think is a clear third best here, although with more than enough game that whoever wins the opener will have to work to make the last sixteen.

Neil Duff (60-46, 83.56) v Ben Robb (78-83, 84.55) or Johan Engstrom (110-115, 86.34_ = Really fun mini section. You could make a reasonable argument that any one of these three possible matches would not look out of place in the last 16, if not further into the event. Robb I'm a little surprised to see here, I would have thought that even though Jonny Tata got the main NZ spot for Ally Pally that Ben could have got there as well with the expansion but I guess not, known really solid competitor who's never quite cracked it at the PDC worlds level but here could be a dangerous opponent. Johan's been around the SDC circuit and we know plenty about him and has to be taken seriously at this level, while Duff has course and distance and is doing enough on the circuit to secure the number 3 seed, so is another one who clearly can't be dismissed. Would not be surprised to see any of these three get out of this section, it ranks very closely for me.

Thomas Junghans (38-38, 81.57) v Jim McEwan (9-1, 91.00) or Stephen Rosney (4-6, 80.42) - A somewhat less interesting section now. McEwan has been around the block and knows how to play, while Rosney was a new name to me only very recently on account of good runs in Killarney, and then clearly in the qualifier to get here in the first place, so while Jim has the experience, Stephen might have the form and be hitting this event at the right time. Junghans isn't bad by any stretch but is one of the weaker seeds for sure, and while he'll make them work it really souldn't surprise me if whoever won the first round game turned him over here as well.

David Fatum (32-36, 82.34) v Jenson Walker (73-78, 84.96) or Jiri Brejcha (0-6, 78.21) - Few different things going on here. Walker seems like someone who is definitely just passing through the WDF system and will eventually end up with a tour card and might already be the best player of the bunch. Jiri's from a rising area who I assume from that record we did see on the Euro Tour last year, albeit briefly, and I get not awful but just making up the numbers vibes. Fatum on the other hand is the veteran who's had maybe the best run of his life with the Dutch Open final and can't be taken lightly. Think Jenson will squeeze home but it could be a close one.

Raymond Smith (156-75, 85.46) v Cliff Prior (36-33, 79.63) or Clint Clarkson (9-4, 76.94) - Pretty trivial section compared to most. Clint I know nothing about, but is at least in the database, wile Cliff I know not that too much about but is at least a familiar name and doing better numbers so the home player I think should be fine, while Raymond (who's another from his area that I'm surprised couldn't get a PDC worlds spot) is one of the known good players in the field, even if the numbers quoted look a bit pedestrian, and should easily defeat whoever does actually come through round one.

From there? I think it's a case of identifying the known "good" players (and I'm not trying to be disparaging by implying the rest of the field is shit, by good I'm basically meaning wouldn't look out of place on the PDC circuit) and identifying if and when they might be stopped. van Schie is one of them, should have no problems in the last sixteen, but then McGuirk or maybe someone like a Groenefeld might ask some questions at the quarter final stage. Second quarter I don't think has anyone - Pallett may have been there in the past, Beeton might be there in the future, but for 2025 I'm not seeing anyone. I think it's all the seeds coming through to the last 16, and those two I list facing off in the quarters, and that one should be close but the finalist will come from the top quarter. Third quarter is just a question of how good Mitchell Lawrie is already. If he beats Brandon I can't see him not making the quarters, where I think whoever comes through the Schweyen section  Those three are all real good, if whoever plays Haruki beats Haruki (which won't be trivial but I would expect them to do it), then I think they have enough to play the Veenstra role and kill the hype train just as Richard did to Littler back when. Then in Q4 the known good name is Smith - think the only player who could realistically stop him before the quarters is Walker, and I think he'd have the edge on whoever he plays there, and I get the feeling it'd be whoever gets out of the Duff section with the Junghans section looking ordinary in comparison. As for a final? Let's go van Schie > Sparidaans. Why not.

Tuesday, 11 November 2025

So we didn't post group stage projections

There's a few reasons for this, mainly lack of time, but:

a) The games come so quickly and trying to make minor updates after each set of games would just be too much to manage
b) With it only being best of nine, it increases the damage that is done if you don't win the bull, so you probably need even more edge than you would do ordinarily to ensure that your bet is still +EV if you don't win in the backroom
c) The usual dangers of dead rubbers, players having limited or no data, players mailing it in if they only need one leg

In retrospect this might have been a shame, as it'd probably have told us to lay Wade twice and it work for once. Still, it is what it is, and we will look at the last sixteen. I'll post the ones we know now then edit once we've got the data in from tonight, which I'll hopefully do tonight but I think realistically it'll be Wednesday (although when, given I want to watch the Running Man remake then will be in the pub in the evening, I don't know). Going short-medium-long-composite as usual.

Humphries - van der Velde - 92/93/92/92
Dobey - Smith - 84/75/70/76
Woodhouse - Evans - 44/54/55/51
Price - Schindler - 71/73/71/72
Littler - Nijman - 76/81/81/79
Rock - Scutt - 82/86/70/79
van Gerwen - Noppert - 67/63/64/65
Wenig - Springer - 36/32/32/33

So I'll take a bit of the in form Evans at the price he's available at, and then check on the Thursday games later.

Some things I want to do - look at if Littler outright for the worlds is in any way value, a WDF worlds preview, but I'll wait for the latter until next week once there's been quite a few more qualifiers this weekend, so maybe I do the WDF thing on Thursday.

Wednesday afternoon edit - not a great night sleep or morning so binned off the film until tomorrow. Bottom half projections listed above.

Monday, 3 November 2025

Grand Slam draw

Have a bit of time and it's out, so may as well have a quick post about it:

Group A - Moderately boring. If it was peak Smith then this would be quite exciting, but Humphries and Aspinall look too good at the moment. Spellman's always going to be a wildcard but it seems as if we've heard less of him than we did a couple of years back where he did look very dangerous, if he is playing back close to that then who knows.

Group B - This one also looks fairly obvious. Dobey and Heta are a class apart with Chris playing the better stuff, Martin has been kind of anonymous this year and hard to gauge where it's at, but doesn't seem in the same ballpark as the first two. Jurjen's shown a decent bit of form so that probable match for third might not be too bad.

Group C - This looks like it's a two horse race for second to me. Bunting is clearly the best player, but maybe not quite so good as he was maybe six months ago. Toylo is one that might throw up something dangerous in any of the games but is probably a favourite not to do it in any of them, while Schindler and Woodhouse are probably closer than you think in terms of raw playing strength, Martin's just turned it into results. Probably one of the few groups where anyone can turn over anyone.

Group D - Price is the pick here, not Wade. Gerwyn's good in pretty much any format, while I don't think this short race format in the group stage is the best for Wade. Evans is hitting some nice form so it wouldn't surprise me in the slightest if he was able to nick second - although it'd be less of a surprise than Wade winning the group given how much I've undersold him. Bellmont will be competent but I don't think there is enough in the game yet to be a serious threat to any of these, even in a short format.

Group E - OK, Littler is going to win, but after that, who knows? Gurney is the known name, Scutt was going through a pretty bad slump but looks to be kicking out of it at the right time, while Sedlacek is a dangerous player (just started getting seeded for the last couple of Pro Tours) and has looked that way for a while now. Probably the group with the easiest pick for winner but you can throw a blanket over the other three, could be a 3-1-1-1 group coming down to who gets the smallest kicking off Littler and can either avoid a bad defeat in the other loss, or put a hurting on someone in the win.

Group F - For the love of god. Ashton producing the game of her life to beat Nijman and we see him average 105 in all three games and lose the lot again would be the funniest thing, but Ashton going 0-3 is probably orders of magnitude more likely than Littler going 3-0 in the previous group. van Veen and Rock are extremely close to me, Nijman is behind but he is not far behind, but a clear third favourite. Could certainly spring an upset and navigate to second or some kind of 2-2-2-0 clusterfuck for sure.

Group G - This one seems like the group of death. van Gerwen is probably not quite the MvG of the past, but is certainly still a danger. Anderson might have tailed off a bit in the last few months but is still mighty threatening. Greaves is probably already at a top 64 level, while Springer might already be at a top 32 level. This one probably favours experience over youth as to who qualifies, but you really can't be too certain about any match in this group. Only other fourth seed you might have said that about is Sedlacek but he got chucked in the Littler group so meh.

Group H - I mean this one seems quite bland really. Wenig and Crabtree will get a lot of good stage experience here, but they're both some way off of Clayton and Noppert. Is there that much between the top two? Not really. Is there that much between the bottom two? Not really. Is there that much of a chasm between those two pairs? For me, yep, probably the easiest group to call a reverse forecast on, but that's only because Lukeman has course and distance (any more racing metaphors I can squeeze in?) and maybe a bit closer to the top two in that group even if JvdV isn't.

I've got other stuff to write about plus I might get some numbers out for this so it might be a busy week here, even after the fact this is the second post. In one day!

The WDF. Hmm.

You know how I said the WDF had done a shitty job publicising the World Masters? Well, at least as far as me being able to see any of the publicity they did do? It didn't take much for me to see things when something didn't go quite to plan, as the situation and their attempts at managing the situation somewhat blew up social media the other day.

So basically it seems someone worked out they had fucked up one of the invite tables or something like that, and invited the wrong player to the women's event. As this was apparently noticed during the final qualifier itself, it was seemingly too late to do a switcheroo of the invites, which is quite obvious as the player you'd take out can't really join the qualifier that's already started. As such, what they've apparently done is bumped the field up to 25, by inviting both the player they should have done in the first place, and the one they did by mistake, and rather than having two spots, those players in the last chance saloon quali have an effective play in game, and they all get paid first round money whatever happens.

Which is fine and is making the best of a bad situation - only then that they seemingly deleted the explanation post and blocked X comments for future posts relating to the tournament. Which isn't exactly the way to own your mistakes. The question is how on earth this has happened in the first place. I don't even think this is a case of not being able to count to 24, something's got to have gone somewhat wrong somewhere. Frankly it needs two things doing.

First, it needs an overhaul (installation?) of their player management system. I have no idea what systems they have in place at present, but the first rule of anything IT related is garbage in, garbage out. If you limit the garbage in, then you've at least got a fighting chance. Create a very simple database in terms of what it holds. First name(s), surname, DOB, gender, country, email address. I don't think you need any more data at this point. That then spits out a player number as a unique key, you use that when you enter a WDF event, organisers of the individual event then have known good data that they can feed into Dart Connect or whatever. The main thing I'm trying to prevent here is data being fragmented. God knows how many times I've needed to check whether it's Dave or David Pallett, Matt or Matthew Edgar in my system, let alone situations where there's even more complication, like Martin Atkins, more or less anyone from Scandinavia, places like much of East Asia where it is normal to list the family name first (and seemingly Hungary based on two seconds of AI research as to whether Andras Borbely being listed the wrong way round in DC for the World Open was a fuck up), I still have no idea whether Jeff Springer and Jeff Springer Jr are distinct players, etc etc. I list the fields as I do to cover everything the WDF hosts - Paige Pauling could quite legitimately enter all the open youth, open girls, open and women's events on any given weekend if she wanted. Check eligibility by filtering. Have consistent data across all things you do. One database is better than four.

Second, it needs one solid way to handle submission of tournament results. Have some sort of portal where tournament organisers can submit what they are planning to host, that can then return confirmation of what WDF level event it will be, and once the event is done, present the number of rounds needed to allocate everyone their ranking points. Have this email the players at this stage confirmation of their finishing places, and it's then on the players to notify if there's been a mistake somewhere. Get that bit right, with a back end table that has something like player id - tournament id - tournament date - round reached, and you can then do everything else from there more or less automatically. Yearly ranking tables? Done. Regional ranking tables? Done. Race tables? Done. Handling players winning an auto Lakeside spot by winning a gold event? Easy to identify, easy to handle, just depends on the exact WDF rules as to how you do it. Exclusion of players from Lakeside race list that you know have accepted an Ally Pally invite? Can be done. The rolling rankings are just a one off job. Something like race to Lakeside is also a one off job, would just need a touch more work to handle all the exceptions - the point is that if you get the back end data right, then getting what you want out of it becomes a lot simpler, and I'm not convinced they're getting the back end data right. Fix that, and they've got half a chance of going two weeks without someone making BDO comparisions on X. 

My consultancy charges are very reasonable and can be paid in the currency of Lakeside tickets, just as an aside.

Friday, 31 October 2025

Whoopsie

I was going to post this lunchtime (or there abouts) with what I'm saying here, along with who I think will win through and who I'd want to win through the Grand Slam qualifier. However, despite a combination of:

- only best to five
- no need to play the quarters onwards
- people already pre qualified eliminate at least one, if not closer to two, round of 128 games

The PDC in their infinite wisdom started the thing an hour early, so when I went to look at the draw at just gone twelve, half expecting the board assignments to still be processing, we're under way. Oh well, I guess it is a logistics things in needing every second to set up for that UK worlds qualifier tomorrow. Oh wait.

If I was going to pick a "think will win, then want to win", I'd have gone the following:

O'Connor, Veenstra
Woodhouse, Dennant
de Decker, Scutt
Nijman, Warner
Noppert, Williams (Jim)
Joyce, Sedlacek
Smith (Ross), Taylor
Wattimena, van Duijvenbode

We'll see how close we are. Anyway, I said I'd give an FRH update after the last PC so here we are:

1 Luke Littler
2 Luke Humphries
3 Stephen Bunting
4 Jonny Clayton
5 Michael van Gerwen
6 Gian van Veen (UP 7)
7 James Wade (DOWN 1)
8 Danny Noppert (UP 1)
9 Josh Rock (DOWN 2)
10 Gerwyn Price (DOWN 2)
11 Chris Dobey (DOWN 1)
12 Ross Smith (DOWN 1)
13 Damon Heta (DOWN 1)
14 Nathan Aspinall (UP 4)
15 Martin Schindler (UP 1)
16 Mike de Decker (DOWN 2)
17 Jermaine Wattimena
18 Gary Anderson (DOWN 3)
19 Ryan Searle
20 Cameron Menzies (NEW)

Big climbers are obviously van Veen, although Noppert's fine run keeps him in the top 10. Aspinall's move is down to that Euro Tour rather than anything else, while Cammy takes advantage of Rob Cross' bang average form (and Cross isn't just out of the top 20, he's down to 25, although everyone in that slot is pretty close. As for those Pro Tours, Dobey looked pretty damned good in the one he won, while Woodhouse is still waiting for a first title after being denied by Nijman who continues to improve solidly. We're now done with the floor events, so barring someone getting snookers we know the 80 players from the OOM and Pro Tour list, and that's also settled up a bunch of the Challenge Tour and Dev Tour questions. So glad that van den Herik made it, and after cruelly missing out on it last year, van der Velde making it as well is also really welcome.

Also it seems as if the World Masters is on. Who's to say that the WDF do a shit publicity job?

Monday, 27 October 2025

GIAN!

Had very bad night's sleep on Friday so wasn't able to get the data entered in time for the last sixteen (and as a consequence, later rounds), but doubt anything of much value was lost. I guess maybe it would have thrown up Aspinall to lose again? Who knows. In any case, it's a huge result for Gian to jump up to number six in the FRH rankings, right into the middle of a cluster between third and seventh with less than a PC win between them all. Although, with that being said, with only Bunting and Wade actually playing this week, van Veen will have to wait to get the Dutch #1 spot, with van Gerwen only being in that group on account of his semi final. Noppert moved up to 8th with his semi but is some way behind that pack. Joyce and Gurney gained a couple of spots, while Pietreczko (who had a Pietreczko > Littler last longer) jumps back into the top 32 and could go a bit higher with Cullen just a few hundred points away. I'll put a full update in after the last PC.

Bellmont claimed the Challenge Tour in other things that happened this weekend, so that'll get him onto the tour, which is a welcome addition, but unlike some other CT winners it does feel like maybe a bit of a wasted Grand Slam spot, Stefan's fine but doesn't really seem like a top 64 level player or someone that'd jump out as someone who'd retain his card for sure. In terms of Slam spots, there's now confirmed as two spots for Pro Tour wins, at the moment it's Dobey and Heta, but Smith (Ross), Searle and Cullen all have two wins as well and can force themselves in, while there's another eight that'll have a chance if they bink back to back this week. More interesting is the race to get into the worlds - Bates appears the last man in who could do with staying in for additional Dev Tour spots, quite a few interesting players just outside as of right now but there is more than a first round win gap between Bates in 40th and Hunt in 41st so I guess for those looking to break in, the hope is that 35th to 40th are all separated by less than a grand, so what are the chances that none of them go 0-2 this week and give someone a chance? You can drop down to 49th and still have someone that can get above with a semi final run ot s couple of board wins - if that for some of them. I may do a bit more of a deeper dive on Wednesday when a lot of the permutations have been sorted. It's not as if I don't have the time.

As an aside, looking back at the next new winners post from February (it was either just before or after the UK Open, I think before). How bad was that list?

Thursday, 23 October 2025

Euros round one

Not sure how much value we'll be able to get out of this, given the incredibly vanilla nature of the field and the relatively small field size in general, but we'll have a look anyway to see if we can claw anything back. Numbers will go in small data/more form based to large data/less form based, with the composite overall number last.

Ryan Joyce v Luke Woodhouse - 48/49/50 - 49
Ross Smith v Peter Wright - 83/69/62 - 71
Gian van Veen v Damon Heta - 61/58/61 - 60
Gerwyn Price v Daryl Gurney - 64/71/72 - 69
Jonny Clayton v Ryan Searle - 59/57/53 - 56
Martin Schindler v Dave Chisnall - 56/49/53 - 53
Wessel Nijman v Michael van Gerwen - 50/49/44 - 48
Stephen Bunting v Chris Dobey - 59/59/54 - 57
Niko Springer v Jermaine Wattimena - 41/46/47 - 45
Gary Anderson v Cameron Menzies - 63/70/72 - 68
James Wade v Mike De Decker - 55/48/45 - 49
Josh Rock v Ricardo Pietreczko - 81/79/78 - 79
Luke Humphries v Krzysztof Ratajski - 76/78/70 - 75
Luke Littler v Raymond van Barneveld - 92/82/88 - 87
Nathan Aspinall v Rob Cross - 51/46/42 - 46
Dirk van Duijvenbode v Danny Noppert - 63/63/61 - 62

As expected, not much going, would have probably had a few minimum plays if we had a bit more working capital to get things to the minimum amount to bet, but we don't, so just laying Aspinall (after he wins a Euro Tour naturally) and having a small nibble on Ando.