Friday, 5 December 2025

Worlds post 7/8 - the van Gerwen bit


Feels like it's been somewhat of a disappointing season for MvG, with the two Luke's sweeping up pretty much everything, but was it? Working from the floor up, van Gerwen played a very truncated season, playing less than half the events and having a very surprising record of more first round defeats than wins, mostly to opponents he has no business losing to, only having a single run to the quarter finals which saw him miss out on the Players Championship Finals for the first time since its inception. The European Tour did see him pick up a win in Munich, running over Huybrechts, Searle, Joyce, Rock and then van Veen in the final, but again only played half the events, not doing too much else outside of that win with just a semi final to add to that tournament win. That would get him into Dortmund, where (apart from the worlds final last year) he had his best major run of 2025, reaching the semi finals with wins against Nijman, Dobey and Gurney, before falling to van Veen by the odd break. Other majors were generally well below par - losing in the last sixteen in the Masters to Dimitri having been a leg away from the match, he got through a real tough first game draw at the UK Open against Dirk only to be stunned by Robert Owen, while at Blackpool he got through RvB as you would expect, but would lose a lead against Josh Rock in the second round and eventually lose in overtime. Dirk would then avenge that UK Open loss in the first round of the Grand Prix, while at the Slam, he won his group despite a loss to Niko Springer, but would go down 10-6 in the first knockout stage to Danny Noppert. Unranked events did help him somewhat, he won the World Series finals with what should be in contention for best tournament performance, beating both Lukes (including Littler in the final), along with the deadly young pair of players Rock and Nijman as well as former world champion Rob Cross, but he'd do basically nothing in the circuit events, skip the World Cup, and miss the playoffs in the Premier League for only the second time ever. He's clearly still a top player, but his level is not what it was and there's so many more players who are at the level he is at now than there were before.

Tatsunami is a relatively unknown player from Japan, who I don't have a great deal on in my database, so this write up could be interesting. He's qualified through winning the Steel Darts Japan event, something I believe is a relatively new series (but happy to be fact checked on that), where in an eclectic field of new and old names, he won a pair of events in September, where he managed a good average in the high 90's in the opening round, hit a twelve in a deciding leg in the quarters, come from a set behind in the semi final prior to being the beneficiary of missed darts to break and throw for the match from his opponent in the final. Fair to say that he did avoid a lot of the bigger names in the event, Keita Ono was in the semis, Seigo Asada made the quarters, while Tomoya Goto probably should have beaten the other eventual finalist but didn't. Still, you can only beat what's in front of you. Tatsunami did play some of the Asian Tour, winning event six on home soil against Asada in the final, and made a further semi final an two quarters. This got him into the Asian Championship, but in a group where A beat B beat C beat A, he had the worst leg difference and didn't qualify for the knockout stages. He's been around for a little bit, winning on the Asian Tour in 2023 and winning some fairly big unranked WDF event last season, but this looks like a first round match we won't need to deliberate over that much.

Willie is just outside the top 40 that got straight iinvites and finished up second on the Pro Tour rankings behind only European Tour winner Niko Springer to bring his record of consecutive appearances here up to nine. O'Connor had a steady season with a fair few highlights, the best work arguably being done on the Pro Tour, where he opened with a pair of quarter final runs in the early part of the season, going a little bit quieter in the mid season but without getting horrible results, then hitting form at the last time, with the last ten events starting with a pair of semi final finishes, only being beaten by Gerwyn Price and Stephen Bunting, both in deciding legs, and the last two events would be even stronger, reaching the final in the penultimate event where he was 6-5 up against Chris Dobey but lost the last three legs, then ended with a third semi, being stopped on that occasion by Luke Woodhouse. That good form throughout the season would see him finish in the top quarter of seeds for Minehead, but he would be possibly surprisingly beaten by Ricardo Pietreczko in the opening round. He got into quite a lot of the European Tour events, playing in nine with a best run being to the quarter finals in the Netherlands, getting in as an alternate for a seed, beating Boris Krcmar and Ritchie Edhouse prior to running into Luke Humphries, but despite that good record of qualification he'd finish just a few spots outside of the qualification line for what would have been a first European Championship in five years. He made the main Masters field and knocked out Rob Cross before losing in straight sets (but all deciding legs, oddly enough) to Danny Noppert, and the UK Open remained somewhat of a happy hunting ground, where he beat Tom Sykes, Scott Williams and Mensur Suljovic to get to the last sixteen, only losing by the odd braek to Nathan Aspinall. A strong player who seems to be hitting form at the right time, he's got the experience and quality to maybe cause some surprises here.

Krzysztof Kciuk is the veteran (although surprisingly younger than Ratajski) Polish player and former tour card holder who'll make a third appearance here sixteen years after making a debut where he lost to Haruki Muramatsu in a prelim, and two years after his last appearance when he lost in straight sets to Connor Scutt. Kciuk makes it here having won through a large field in the Polish qualifier, needing to come through eight rounds to book his return, notably beating Tytus Kanik along the way and needing to navigate a last leg decider at the quarter final stage. It's been a quiet year otherwise, he did try getting onto the European Tour in all but two of the qualifiers, and was one off a spot in the main event twice, losing to Petr Krivka and Dalibor Smolik, unfortunately having been a break up in both events. He did play the Challenge Tour weekend which was in Germany, being eligible having played Q-School where he got to the second stage, put himself in an OK position with a day 1 quarter final run up to Karel Sedlacek, but would follow that up with three first round losses. In that Challenge Tour weekend, Kciuk did OK, getting to the last sixteen a couple of times, picking up wins over the likes of Stefan Bellmont, Michael Unterbuchner and Jarno Bottenberg, but couldn't go deep enough to do anything like threatening any Pro Tour call ups. He did play some WDF, getting alright runs in Budapest and getting through the groups of their World Masters in a run to the last 32. He's not bad, but I doubt he scores heavily enough or has been playing a high enough standard of opponent to really cause O'Connor too may problems.

Peter Wright seems to have been at the stage where he's been threatening to drop down the rankings like a stone, only to pull off some result to keep things ticking over, pretty much since his last world title. 2023 it was that European Championship that's just dropped off the rankings hence the #30 seeding. Last year it was a Euro Tour. This year it's, er, well after that quarter final run twelve months ago, it's not been much of anything. TV has not been good - he beat Kevin Doets from a set down at the Masters only to lose to Stephen Bunting. At the UK Open he lost to Luke Littler first game - tough draw and he made it 10-9 to be fair. At Blackpool he was down early against Wattimena, he did pull back a break but still lost 10-8, then at Leicester he went out to defending champion Mike de Decker. He lost to Ross Smith at Dortmund, did not qualify for the Grand Slam for the first time in over a decade, and while he did nick a win against Joe Cullen in the Players Championship Finals, it would be one and done as he lost to James Wade. Are there any signs at lower levels that he can halt what could be a further decline in 2026? Well he did make four Euro Tour quarter finals, but bear in mind he was seeded for all of them and he won't get that luxury going forward - heck, he may not even get the Pro Tour invites if he's not careful. Quite a few opening round losses, although most were to players who are better or likely not much worse at this point, only one of them is what I'd describe as bad. On the floor Wright did get to one final, but that was back in April and he couldn't get close to Cameron Menzies, and his only other run to a quarter final was even earlier. Since then he's missed a few events (which I'm not sure he can afford to), had an opening losing record, and only pulled out a singular board win in nearly 20 attempts, and even in that one he only played one good opponent, needing every leg against Ross Smith and going out to Thibault Tricole. His scoring is still above 90, and he is not defending much of anything here (two years ago being the one where he lost in straight sets to Jim Williams), but with him being outside the Matchplay race spots right now, and with him nearer 60 than 50 already, I do kind of half wonder if the thought isn't in his head to go out on the stage where he had his biggest successes. Would be sad to see but I do think there's a non-zero possibility of it.

Noa is back for a second year, after making a losing debut twelve months ago to Kevin Doets. van Leuven is here after finishing fourth in the Women's Series, picking up a pair of titles in Rosmalen along with a further final in the last event of the season in Wigan. Noa was like everyone else a mile behind Beau Greaves, and also finished behind Sherrock and Ashton, but Beau and Lisa qualifying through other methods saw the qualifying spots slide down far enough to allow a return to the big stage. A former Challenge Tour winner, I've got nothing in the database except that match against Doets. van Leuven did play Q-School, entering at stage 1 but not being able to progress past the last 64 stage on any day with the only notable win being against fellow last time debutant Romeo Grbavac. That did allow van Leuven to play the Challenge Tour, but this was limited to the one continental weekend, and resulted in just one run to the top 64 and a 3-5 overall match record, putting in one very good showing against Andy Hamilton but otherwise averaging in the seventies half the time, indeed the Women's Series average, which while second behind only Beau, was only 81, and while the usual quality of opponent influences averages caveat applies, on that series there were too many matches that saw drops into the seventies, or even worse. If you're not even averaging an eighteen dart leg over a large sample, then how much chance you'd have of winning a game on this stage is very questionable.

Kim Huybrechts remains safely in the tour card positions, but is still clearly some way off his best ranking, and after a brief flirtation of getting back towards the top 32 two or three years ago, there's a distinct lack of indicators to say that he's capable of getting back towards there, and while he qualified for here perfectly safely through the Pro Tour rankings, there weren't any obvious standout results like that miracle European Tour final we had to finish 2024. On the floor, Kim did not make a single quarter final, a run which extends all the way back to when he last won on the floor early in 2023, and that seems like something that most players would do by accident at some point, especially over a two year period. Indeed, Huybrechts only won his board once all season, and that was right back in the second event of the year, a little bit against the run of play given a 3-9 round one start to the year. Kim wouldn't recover to an even record on that front, but would have a decent enough record in terms of getting to board finals, even if he was not winning them. This record saw him miss the Players Championship finals by six grand making for a first miss since he's held a tour card. He at least did a lot better in qualifying in Europe than last year, playing in six of the fourteen events, getting into the first as an alternate, beating a local qualifier then only just losing to MvG, losing narrowly to Ritchie Edhouse and Cameron Menzies, before getting another alternate call up, beating Ian White then being whitewashed by Ross Smith. He'd use the host nation qualifier to make Antwerp and just beat Lukas Wenig prior to a loss to James Wade, and finish in Hungary with a best run to round three, where as an alternate yet again he'd beat Andreas Harrysson and then potential opponent here Peter Wright to make the final day, losing to Wade again. He did little on TV, beating Tom Bissell in the Masters before losing to Gabriel Clemens, and he'd run into Wenig again at the UK Open, outlasting him in that one before picking up just a couple of legs in a one sided defeat against Damon Heta. The numbers are not dreadful, but they are down and he in no way has a false ranking at this point in time.

Arno Merk is going to make his debut on this stage after winning through the German area qualifier. This has seen a few good players make it in the past and the somewhat convoluted system now extends to several adjacent countries. Merk won that last couple of events in what is now called PDC Europe Next Gen in Hildesheim, which would be enough to get him into the Super League final stage. Getting somewhat of a favourable group, featuring Oliver Müller then four other players I've not heard of, Arno ended with a very good 9-1 record, averaging steadily in the 80's and breaking into the 90's once. This pushed him into the final stages, in which he started with a pair of 90 averages again, in the mid range against Kevin Troppmann and being marginally below a ton against Yorick Hofkens. A semi final win against Jarod Becker was comfortable, but Daniel Klose would be tougher in the final, Merk prevailing 8-6, but was hanging on a bit at the end having been 5-2 up. Arno did try to get on the European Tour a few times, but ended up no better than being two games away in any of them, so couldn't repeat a previous appearance last year where he was given the dubious honour of playing Luke Littler with inevitable results. Arno played the Challenge Tour a fair bit, and had a few cashes, a best run being a quarter final where he lost out to Dave Pallett, it wasn't much but it did get him into a pair of Pro Tours in Hildesheim, where he at least won his first game in both and got the scalp of Scott Williams. The limited numbers we have aren't good with a horrid lack of five visit finishes, and there's not enough evidence at lower levels outside my database that the game is there yet. He is still relatively young though and he did take a big break from the sport, and was highly touted as a youngster - this isn't actually his worlds debut, having played Lakeside way back in 2011!

I'm going to go with a controversial couple of shouts here. I don't think any of the unseeded players will get particularly close in round one, but I'm going with shocks in round two. Kim Huybrechts beating Peter Wright might not be a huge shock and he has beaten him on this stage when he was last the defending champion, and did win their matchup this year, but it might look like it. O'Connor over van Gerwen would be much more of a legitimate surprise, but it's one I think might happen. Willie's hugely experienced at this stage, is coming into form at the right time, the numbers are good, and it is not as if van Gerwen has been tearing things up in 2025. There's usually at least one real surprise, and I'm calling it here. And frankly, if he can beat Michael, he'd have no issues against Huybrechts. Winner - Willie O'Connor


It's been a moderately quiet year for Anderson on the stage, although the underlying statistics as well as successes on the lower circuits indicate that he is still very much a force to be reckoned with. On TV he's not managed a great deal, with opening game losses to Dimitri van den Bergh in the Masters and Jonny Clayton at the UK Open. He'd do a bit better at the Matchplay where he got off the mark with a win against Luke Woodhouse prior to pushing Stephen Bunting to overtime, while at the Grand Prix he'd have a best run of the season, edging past Barney before routing a below par Joe Cullen, prior to defeat to Danny Noppert. He'd lose an opening game in Dortmund to Cameron Menzies and not get out of a tough but not horrible group at the Grand Slam, while in the Players Championship Finals, Gary beat Mario Vandenbogaerde but would lose in the second round to Ricardo Pietreczko. As mentioned, lower tours were good - starting with an early semi final on the European Tour, before getting a win after a break of a few tourneys in Sindelfingen, notably beating van Veen and van Duijvenbode and not dropping a leg in the final to Andrew Gilding. He'd only play a couple more before reaching a second final, renewing his rivalry with Gerwyn Price who'd take that title, before deciding his work is done and skipping the remaining events. He missed a fair few Pro Tours as well, but would add another title there, with an 8-3 victory against surprise finalist Adam Lipscombe. The only other thing to mention would be a loss at the World Cup - drawing the Netherlands would not be ideal and he probably wasn't with the strongest partner he could get, but not losing a leg was a big surprise. There's still a lot of talent in there, but with lack of stage results and turning 55 during the course of the tournament, you might question, five years since his last major final, whether there's enough to make a huge impression in a lengthy, long format tournament such as this one.

Hunt will make a fourth appearance here, and his first for four years, being without a tour card for a couple of them and not making enough of an impact on the circuit when he has had a card to qualify directly either. However, he got through the PDPA qualifier for the second time in his career, getting comfortable wins over Max Czerwinski and Thomas Lovely with 90 averages, before getting what might have looked like a bit of finishing line syndrome in the final against Tytus Kanik, where a 5-1 lead became a decider at 6-6, but breaking in the decider to book a big stage return. The floor was not terrible, with more wins than losses in the first round, and he did pick up two of his best results in the last three events, with a board win in PC32 where he pushed Luke Littler fairly close to get to the quarters, and a final to add to it in the last event of the season. Prior to that however, he only made two board finals all season, another one quite late in PC29, and one in the first event of the season. So while he wasn't losing in the first round that much, he had an enormous streak of events where he'd either do that, or lose in the second round, although to be somewhat fair, on a scan of the match record he was generally going out to players who are clearly better than he is right now. He couldn't get much going on the European circuit either, going 1-2 in final qualifying rounds to make just the single event, this early in the season in Göttingen, where he lost to Martin Schindler (again, not the easiest draw) 6-2. He went out early in the Masters, but did have a bit of a cameo in the UK Open, winning against Maik Kuivenhoven before getting a bye after de Graaf withdrew late to get into the pot with the big guns. There he'd lose 10-7 to Ryan Searle, not the worst scoreline and the averages were basically the same. Adam had a lot of hype about him when he was still around the Development Tour ranks, but he's in his thirties now and is still yet to show enough to make anyone think he'll be able to stick on the main PDC circuit.

Connor Scutt had a very strong 2023 and 2024, making a couple of Pro Tour finals in that period, but 2025 has been a lot quieter and he only just sneaked into the field as the last Pro Tour qualifier. He shouldn't be anywhere near that marker, but form just collapsed mid season and it only just recovered partially for him to make a third appearance here in a row. Scutt, having ended last season with a major quarter final at Minehead, looked like he might have been able to push towards the top 32, but started with a really changeable Pro Tour effort, making three board finals with one win in the first ten events but not winning a match outside of that, and it would take him until the last six events of the season for him to make another board final, doing so on back to back days in Leicester but not actually being able to win either of them. That left him outside of the Players Championship Finals equation by over five grand, and making three European Tour events, two where he lost in the first round to Gian van Veen and Callan Rydz sandwiching a win against Ritchie Edhouse prior to a second round defeat to Luke Humphries, would be needed to secure the Ally Pally place. He still had something going at the start of the season, where he made the last 32 in the UK Open, beating Berry van Peer and notably Gerwyn Price in the fourth round 10-9, before putting in another good showing but being a bit short in a 10-7 loss to Damon Heta, and he showed signs of getting things back together by coming through the Grand Slam tour card holder qualifier in style, averaging nearly a ton in a deciding leg win over James Hurrell and a whitewash of Peter Wright, before averaging 104 and 103 in another 5-0 against Adam Hunt and then in the final round against Mike de Decker. Connor then continued that good play to get through the group stage - everyone lost to Littler there but Sedlacek and Gurney is not a trivial ask. That got him into the knockout stage where he was able to take Josh Rock all the way to a deciding leg. Those runs might be enough to convince me that whatever was going on mid season may well be behind him, and that the numbers listed might be a touch of an underestimate.

Simon Whitlock is perhaps a little bit of a surprise returning player, having not qualified last year and losing his tourcard, but the former finalist is back, making a seventeenth appearance here following his win in the ANZ Premier League. A new idea, Whitlock was simply invited which seems a tad unfair to everyone else who had to earn their way in, but whatever, and he wasn't able to win any of the seven nights, but did lose in three finals, giving him the points to make the finals night, where he defeated Jonny Tata 8-3 then Raymond Smith 10-7 to claim the title. We're then kind of limited beyond that - Whitlock didn't play any DPA events, and didn't play any ADA events either, but he did play the first Challenge Tour weekend, making a couple of quarter finals. He was an interesting pick for the World Cup alongside Damon Heta, winning through their group with ease and crushing Argentina before losing to Germany, he did play the seniors' worlds only to lose in the first round, and he was involved in the World Series, losing in the legs in his part of the world to Josh Rock and Chris Dobey, while at the finals event he'd draw Luke Littler, which he kept moderately close but ultimately couldn't get the win. The numbers we've seen have hit the 90's on quite a few occasions, but seem more in the 80's, which is kind of what we saw towards the end of his tour card run, so it doesn't look like he's regressed much, but from a spot where he lost his card, it's not encouraging given he's playing someone who does have one.

Jermaine Wattimena's continued his impressive resurgence in 2025, and is now well back within the seeds for this event, backing up a 2024 which saw him win his first major final with his first PDC title wins, something that's been long overdue. These came on the floor - first threatening in June where he got to a final only to lose to Stephen Bunting, he would finally get over the line a month later, defeating Lukas Wenig who was also looking for his first title in that tournament. One quickly became two, as Jermaine would take it all the way in October, beating Nathan Aspinall very comfortably in the final. The last few weekends saw a further semi final and two quarter finals, while he did start the season with two quarter finals in the first three events, showing solid form throughout the season. On the European Tour it was a little bit more mixed, getting to a couple of quarter finals later in the season, but only getting to the final day five times, with a few more first round exits than I'd have expected. While he couldn't back up last year's run to the European Championship final, TV wasn't too bad, with the highlight being the Players Championship finals, where he went all the way to the semi final - coming in as the sixth seed, he defeated Wesley Plaisier and Ryan Joyce fairly easily, come through tight encounters with Ryan Searle and James Wade, before being heavily routed by Nathan Aspinall. Earlier in the year he got through the qualifiers to make the main Masters field, where he'd be drawn against Josh Rock, and he made his best UK Open run in a while, getting to round five where drawing Littler would limit how far he could go. He returned to the Matchplay and Grand Prix for the first time in several years, beating Peter Wright in the former but that'd be the only win, getting Littler in round two where he had a decent midway lead only to lose in overtime, and Danny Noppert won a deciding leg at Leicester. He'd get to the second round in Dortmund, perhaps surprisingly losing to Ricardo Pietreczko, and in unranked events make a return to the World Series finals, where he'd lose a scrappy one to Kevin Doets, having turned over Humphries in the Dutch leg of the tour. Still very much on an upward trajectory with the title hoodoo gone, he could very much beat his best run here (which was to the third round last season).

Dominik Gruellich is a pretty young German player who was able to win a tour card for the first time in January, and has made very much an up and down start to a full senior career. Just about making it in through the Pro Tour rankings, more or less the entirety of his ranking money came from the Pro Tour, after hitting just the singular European Tour event all season, losing out to Luke Woodhouse in Göttingen. The floor was a slow start for sure, picking up just the one win in the first eleven events, then he hit a little bit of a purple patch with five straight board finals - one of which he won, but the other he took all the way to the final somehow, beating top 32 players in Dirk van Duijvenbode, Michael Smith and Daryl Gurney along the way, he would lose to a red hot Jonny Clayton in the final, but he was so near to being the next German player to win a title before Gabriel Clemens does. The next dozen or so events would be so-so, but he finished much as he started with a string of seven defeats to end the season. A win in any one of those events would have got him to Minehead, but as things turned out there was a four way tie for 63rd to 66th, so he was the only player not to make the field on countback. Harsh, but they've got to have some sort of tiebreaker. Still eligible to play the Development Tour, he had a pretty good season there, finishing in the top ten of the rankings having claimed two titles, one convincingly over fellow tour card holder Leon Weber, and the other just about against Beau Greaves. This'd get him into the world youth championship, where he was an early casualty against Lee Lok Yin, but he did get a couple of stage wins at the UK Open, beating former Pro Tour winner Danny Jansen and Andreas Harrysson before losing to Nick Kenny. It's been a season where he's needed to adapt and he'll have learned a lot, I don't think he has a great chance of doing anything here given the draw but it'll be an important part of his learning curve.

Scott Williams is still in the world's top 40, but looks very likely to drop from those spots once the semi final money from two years ago drops off after this tournament. What's he done in 2025? There's been some moments, particularly on the Pro Tour. A former winner at that level when he didn't have a tour card, the number of first round defeats were fairly limited so the prize money kept ticking over, and he had several deep runs, reaching four semi finals, and going one further on another occasion to reach a second career Pro Tour final, only to lose to James Wade in a game where he averaged well but just couldn't win too many legs. That mix of consistency and flashes of quality would get Scott to the Players Championship Finals comfortably in the top half of the seeds, where he'd beat Ian White as you might expect, and then lose to Josh Rock, as you also might expect. The European Tour was almost a total loss, making just the one event where he did at least beat Wessel Nijman, but Josh Rock would do him again in round two, so we're just looking at TV events for what else he's done at this stage. The World Masters was a bit disappointing, it wasn't the easiest qualifying section but he lost his first game to Ryan Meikle, while the UK Open ended up being one and done, he'd get the scalp of Wessel Nijman again here, but it'd be another case of play well and just fall short in round four, averaging in the high 90's but losing 10-7 to Willie O'Connor. The numbers typically look fine, the results have come in patches, so while it feels like he's had a quiet season and while his ranking is going to naturally fall somewhat, I don't think the year's been bad at all.

Paolo Nebrida will come back for a fourth straight appearance, twelve months after getting a first win at Ally Pally, where he manufactured a win against Jim Williams before shocking Ross Smith with a 3-0 win, prior to going out at the last 32 stage to Jeffrey de Graaf. Paolo maybe didn't have the best season this year as he did previously, only finishing seventh on the Asian Tour, but there are enough spots to go around for him to be back here. On that tour he picked up two titles, both deciding leg victories against Paul Lim and Tomoya Goto, but he'd only make one other final. Paolo got out of the Asian Championship groups but would lose in the last sixteen, and he also made a World Cup debut, knocking out Belgium in the group stages only to run into Wales in the first knockout round where they lost heavily against a strong opponent. He has played the occasional WDF event as well, getting a decent run going in the Korea Open, losing out in the quarter finals to Lourence Ilagan. We know he's going to be fairly solid, but he's up against a fairly solid opponent as well, so he' s got chances, but it'll be tough.

Who comes through here? Gary I think will be fine in round one. Scutt I think is back playing at a higher level than Whitlock is at right now so should get through. Jermaine is a lot better than Gruellich, whereas Scott against Paolo might be the closest one, but I'll take Williams. Can't see Scott giving Jermaine much trouble in the second round given the form Wattimena is in. Scutt against Anderson would be a different question. Gary is clearly the better player, but if we are back at or near peak Scutt, then this could end up being pretty close. I'll just about take Anderson to make it an all seeded third round, but I just think that Jermaine is in too good form and with too much confidence for Gary to come out of this section. Winner - Jermaine Wattimena

As a side note, I've noticed that my database is missing the Asian Tour weekend in Mongolia. I don't know if that wasn't on DC or if it's an oversight, but I'll investigate it now, and while it may mean that some of the numbers for anyone in the field that got to a quarter or better there might be inaccurate, it's before I throw up any projections, so at least nobody is going to have bet based on incomplete data.

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