World Cup of Darts 2021: Scotland beat Netherlands, Wales and Austria to lift second title | Darts News
Paul Prenderville
Comment & Analysis @paulprenders
Peter Wright and John Henderson win crucial doubles in all three matches on Finals Day in Jena – a 3-1 victory over unseeded Austria followed wins over defending champions Wales, and Michael van Gerwen’s Netherlands
Last Updated: 12/09/21 10:05pm
John Henderson and Peter Wright teamed up for Scotland to produce a day of nerveless arrows to win a second World Cup of Darts title in three years, beating unseeded Austria in a dramatic final.
Wright had won Scotland’s maiden World Cup in 2019 alongside Gary Anderson, but with the two-time world champion opting against travelling to Europe, Henderson stepped into the breach and more than played his part alongside the World Matchplay champion.
Henderson made his World Cup debut alongside Robert Thornton last year but the Scots crashed out in the second round – however playing with Snakebite, Hendo was inspired as Scotland became the third team to win the event more than once, after England and the Netherlands.
World Cup of Darts 2021: The Final
Austria | 1-0 | Scotland |
---|---|---|
Mensur Suljovic | 4-1 | John Henderson |
Rowby-John Rodriguez | 1-4 | Peter Wright |
Suljovic/Rodriguez | 3-4 | Wright/Henderson |
Rowby-John Rodriguez | 3-4 | Peter Wright |
For Wright, it’s another title onto a CV that already has the World Matchplay, the UK Open and the World Championship, but for 48-year-old Henderson watching the deciding singles match backstage, it was his first PDC individual title and when Wright sank the winning double, the tears began to flow.
Wales’ 103.93 there is the highest losing average in the pairs format in the history of this tournament.
It beats the 103.47 set by the Czech team earlier this week.
— Dan Dawson (@DanDartsDawson) September 12, 2021
The pair had needed last-leg shoot-outs to win both their quarter-final and semi-final – edging out third seeds the Netherlands in the afternoon’s last-eight tie and then knocking out defending champions Wales, and the superstar pairing of Gerwyn Price and Jonny Clayton, in similar fashion
On both occasions it was Henderson who pinned the winning double, and in the final they were facing an Austria team featuring Mensur Suljovic and Rowby-John Rodriguez that were bidding to become the first unseeded nation to win the tournament,
World Cup of Darts: Roll of Honour
2021 | Scotland | Peter Wright & John Henderson |
---|---|---|
2020 | Wales | Gerwyn Price & Jonny Clayton |
2019 | Scotland | Peter Wright & Gary Anderson |
2018 | Netherlands | Michael van Gerwen & Raymond van Barneveld |
2017 | Netherlands | Michael van Gerwen & Raymond van Barneveld |
2016 | England | Phil Taylor & Adrian Lewis |
2015 | England | Phil Taylor & Adrian Lewis |
2014 | Netherlands | Michael van Gerwen & Raymond van Barneveld |
2013 | England | Phil Taylor & Adrian Lewis |
2012 | England | Phil Taylor & Adrian Lewis |
2010 | Netherlands | Raymond van Barneveld & Co Stompe |
After splitting the two singles matches, with Suljovic beating Henderson and Wright beating Rodriguez, a crucial pairs contest was decisive yet again. Austria blew a 3-0 lead and missed five match darts to allow Hendo to turn in his party piece – the winning double in a last-leg decider.
It left the way clear for Wright to get across the line against Suljovic, but only after more drama. An ice-cool Wright eased into a 3-1 lead with a brilliant 156 finish but with the winning post in sight, he missed five match darts to allow Suljovic to stay alive.
The big Austrian then won the sixth leg to force another decider, where Wright finally got his country over the line.
Victory seals a place at the Grand Slam of Darts in November for Henderson, who has dropped down the world rankings after a tough two years and is chasing a place at the World Championship, while it also made Scotland just the second of the four teams to win with a different pairing since it’s inception in 2011.
Austria’s run – having never previously gone beyond the quarter-finals – also gives Suljovic and Rodriguez a place at the Grand Slam of Darts – but it was Scotland’s day as they delivered a brilliant and dramatic title.
World Cup of Darts 2021: Finals Day Results
Quarter-Finals | Austria 2-1 Northern Ireland |
---|---|
England 2-0 Germany | |
Wales 2-0 Australia | |
Scotland 2-1 Netherlands | |
Semi-Finals | England 0-2 Austria |
Wales 1-2 Scotland | |
Final | Austria 1-3 Scotland |
Big guns fall short chasing fifth title triumph
England and Netherlands bowed out early on Finals Day as their quest to win a World Cup title without their legendary names of past glories will go on for another year.
Both teams have won the title four times, but all four England triumph have been with Phil Taylor and Adrian Lewis, while all four Dutch titles have featured Raymond van Barneveld – three of them alongside Michael van Gerwen.
The Dutch were the first to bow out as they suffered an agonising quarter-final defeat in a doubles decider against Scotland – something that was to prove the theme of the day.
Van Gerwen was playing alongside his third partner in as many years – and teaming up with Dirk Van Duijvenbode he had high hopes of a first title at the event since 2018 and his own first title of any kind since December last year – however after quarter-final defeat to Germany last year, it was another early exit.
MvG had got them off to a flier with a dominant win over Henderson before Wright hit back to beat Van Duijvenbode and force a pairs match that went all the way to the final leg shoot-out where Hendo began his heroics.
England’s Recent World Cup woe
2017 | Adrian Lewis and Dave Chisnall | SF – lost v Netherlands |
---|---|---|
2018 | Rob Cross and Dave Chisnall | QF – lost v Belgium |
2019 | Rob Cross and Michael Smith | R2 – lost v Rep Ireland |
2020 | Michael Smith and Rob Cross | Final – lost v Wales |
2021 | James Wade and Dave Chisnall | SF – lost v Austria |
England went one better, reaching the semi-final, but the pairing of James Wade and Dave Chisnall – the only team with two players ranked inside the world’s top 10 – walked into an Austrian whirlwind.
The top seeds had impressed in ending the home fans hopes of glory at the Sparkassen Arena with a steamrollering of Germany, but they had no answer to Suljovic and Rodriguez and their huge averages – the Englishmen winning just one leg each and the wait for a title will now stretch to six years.
It’s not long until more big time darts is back on your Sky Sports screens, with all seven days of the unique double-to-start World Grand Prix from Leicester’s Morningside Arena live from October 3 as Gerwyn Price defends the title he won last year