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2017 Austrian Darts Open
Tournament information
Dates23–25 June 2017
VenueMultiversum Schwechat
Location Vienna
Country  Austria
Organisation(s) PDC
FormatLegs
Prize fund£135,000
Winner's share£25,000
High checkout170 England Michael Smith
(final) [1]
Champion(s)
Netherlands Michael van Gerwen
« Event 6 Event 8»

The 2017 Austrian Darts Open was the seventh of twelve PDC European Tour events on the 2017 PDC Pro Tour. The tournament took place at Multiversum Schwechat, Vienna, Austria between 23–25 June 2017. It featured a field of 48 players and £135,000 in prize money, with £25,000 going to the winner.

Phil Taylor was the defending champion after defeating Michael Smith 6–4 in the final of the 2016 tournament, but he decided not to participate in the tournament in 2017. [2] [3]

Michael van Gerwen won the title, defeating Michael Smith 6–5 in the final.

Prize money

This is how the prize money is divided: [4]

Stage (num. of players) Prize money
Winner (1) £25,000
Runner-up (1) £10,000
Semi-finalists (2) £6,000
Quarter-finalists (4) £4,000
Third round losers (8) £3,000
Second round losers (16) £2,000
First round losers (16) £1,000
Total £135,000

Qualification and format

The top 16 players from the PDC ProTour Order of Merit on 11 May automatically qualified for the event and were seeded in the second round.

The remaining 32 places went to players from five qualifying events – 18 from the UK Qualifier (held in Milton Keynes on 19 May), eight from the West/South European Qualifier (held on 31 May), four from the Host Nation Qualifier (held on 22 June), one from the Nordic & Baltic Qualifier (held on 19 May) and one from the East European Qualifier (held on 22 June).

Adrian Lewis withdrew for health reasons the day before the event, meaning a fifth Host Nation Qualifier will take his place. [5]

The following players took part in the tournament:

Draw

[13]

First round
(best of 11 legs)
23 June [14]
Second round
(best of 11 legs)
24 June [15]
Third round
(best of 11 legs)
25 June [16]
Quarter-finals
(best of 11 legs)
25 June [17]
Semi-finals
(best of 11 legs)
25 June [18]
Final
(best of 11 legs)
25 June [19]
1 Netherlands Michael van Gerwen 94.966
England Wayne Jones 79.803 Austria Christian Kallinger 77.891
1 Netherlands van Gerwen 96.316
Austria Christian Kallinger 83.216
Netherlands van der Meer 86.733
16 England Steve West 85.784
England Adrian Gray 92.313 Netherlands Vincent van der Meer 89.246
1 Netherlands van Gerwen 101.136
Netherlands Vincent van der Meer 86.696
Germany Schindler 95.661
8 England Alan Norris 90.104
Netherlands Christian Kist 92.061 Scotland Jamie Bain 93.046
Scotland Bain 92.184
Scotland Jamie Bain 99.916
Germany Schindler 90.406
9 England Ian White 93.442
Austria Rowby-John Rodriguez 82.534 Germany Martin Schindler 98.926
1 Netherlands van Gerwen 115.576
Germany Martin Schindler 83.536
13 Spain Reyes 95.931
5 Netherlands Benito van de Pas 88.676
Scotland John Henderson 92.836 Scotland John Henderson 93.723
5 Netherlands van de Pas 90.643
Netherlands Dirk van Duijvenbode 88.862
12 Northern Ireland Gurney 98.516
12 Northern Ireland Daryl Gurney 92.616
Wales Jonny Clayton 90.656 Wales Jonny Clayton 87.982
12 Northern Ireland Gurney 87.743
Austria Roxy-James Rodriguez 80.551
13 Spain Reyes 100.496
4 Australia Simon Whitlock 87.976
Netherlands Vincent van der Voort 101.866 Netherlands Vincent van der Voort 81.031
4 Australia Whitlock 99.795
England Tony Newell 91.563
13 Spain Reyes 96.086
13 Spain Cristo Reyes 97.296
England Justin Pipe 89.405 Germany René Eidams 91.945
1 Netherlands van Gerwen 105.166
Germany René Eidams 83.036
11 England Smith 101.015
2 Scotland Peter Wright 97.665
Finland Kim Viljanen 96.046 Finland Kim Viljanen 85.146
Finland Viljanen 91.996
Poland Krzysztof Ratajski 91.205
England Dobey 92.182
15 England Stephen Bunting 78.090
England Chris Dobey 87.366 England Chris Dobey 88.416
Finland Viljanen 97.904
England David Pallett 82.051
10 England Cullen 99.946
7 Belgium Kim Huybrechts 90.886
England Ritchie Edhouse 82.462 Austria Rusty-Jake Rodriguez 85.953
7 Belgium K. Huybrechts 96.033
Austria Rusty-Jake Rodriguez 94.076
10 England Cullen 107.456
10 England Joe Cullen 98.426
Wales Jamie Lewis 93.176 Wales Jamie Lewis 87.503
10 England Cullen 79.674
Belgium Dimitri Van den Bergh 94.645
11 England Smith 97.886
6 Netherlands Jelle Klaasen 94.936
England Rob Cross 89.696 England Rob Cross 83.260
6 Netherlands Klaasen 88.594
England Andy Jenkins 85.584
11 England Smith 89.046
11 England Michael Smith 94.956
England Chris Quantock 89.596 England Chris Quantock 76.792
11 England Smith 103.676
England Paul Rowley 86.154
14 England King 89.763
3 Austria Mensur Suljović 100.706
England James Wilson 84.245 Belgium Ronny Huybrechts 82.031
3 Austria Suljović 98.894
Belgium Ronny Huybrechts 88.236
14 England King 93.486
14 England Mervyn King 99.546
Austria Zoran Lerchbacher 83.306 Austria Zoran Lerchbacher 91.312
England Lee Bryant 77.104

References

  1. ^ "2017 PDC Austrian Darts Open Results".
  2. ^ "Phil Taylor seals a fourth European Tour title in Vienna". Sky Sports. Retrieved 16 October 2016.
  3. ^ "European Tour | PDC". www.pdc.tv. Archived from the original on 5 February 2017. Retrieved 12 January 2022.
  4. ^ "2017 PDC Austrian Darts Open Player Prize Money".
  5. ^ Allen, Dave. "Austrian Darts Open Draw & Schedule". PDC. Retrieved 22 June 2017.
  6. ^ "European Tour 6-7 Entries".
  7. ^ "2017 PDC Austrian Darts Open Seedings".
  8. ^ "European Tour 6-7 UK Qualifier".
  9. ^ "Qualifying Double for Dutch Trio".
  10. ^ "Rodriguez Trio Win Austrian Places".
  11. ^ Brian. "Qualification ET 7, ET 8, ET 9". PDC Nordic. Archived from the original on 23 August 2017. Retrieved 15 June 2017.
  12. ^ "Rodriguez Trio Win Austrian Places".
  13. ^ "2017 PDC Austrian Darts Open Results".
  14. ^ "Austrian Darts Open Day One".
  15. ^ "2017 Austrian Darts Open Day Two".
  16. ^ "Van Gerwen Takes Austrian Glory".
  17. ^ "Van Gerwen Takes Austrian Glory".
  18. ^ "Van Gerwen Takes Austrian Glory".
  19. ^ "Van Gerwen Takes Austrian Glory".