Premier League Darts Night 14 Preview
Posted on May 12th, 2010
THE battle for places in the Whyte & Mackay Premier League Darts play-offs will be decided when the last of 14 league nights takes place at the Trent FM Arena in Nottingham on Thursday.
The eight stars in the £400,000 tournament have competed over the past three months for places at the Wembley Arena on May 23, when the top four players will contest for the £125,000 first prize.
While World Champion Phil Taylor has already ensured a semi-final berth, having progressed through 13 weeks unbeaten, five players enter the final league night able to finish in the top four.
Simon Whitlock sits second in the league table with 14 points, a point ahead of Mervyn King and Ronnie Baxter, with James Wade on 12 points and Adrian Lewis on 11 points.
But even Australian star Whitlock, the World Championship runner-up, could still miss out on a play-off spot should he lose to King and other results go against him.
Wade opens the night’s games when he faces Terry Jenkins in a match he cannot afford to lose, while a win for Baxter against resurgent Raymond van Barneveld would ensure his top four place.
Whitlock and King meet in the night’s third, and most crucial, fixture, while Taylor meets Lewis in the final match – a game Lewis may need to win to reach the top four should Baxter and Wade suffer defeats.
“It’s going right to the wire and it’s really exciting,” said Whitlock. “I was feeling the tension last week in Newcastle when I played James Wade, and to win that was massive for me.
“I knew I had to go up there and win and it’s the same this week too. I won a Players Championship on Saturday so I’m really confident and feeling good about my game.
“My finishing has been good recently and that’s the thing I practice most on, so if I’m hitting my checkouts I usually do well.”
Defending Premier League champion Wade bounced back from that loss to Whitlock in Newcastle by winning a UK Open Qualifier on Sunday, and admitted: “I play first and I know I have to win because even a draw might not get me into the top four.
“I had a bad start to the season, losing my first four games, so I knew I’d made it tough for myself but I’m going into Thursday positive and looking to beat Terry.
“If I do that, it puts pressure on the other players in their games.”
Should Wade and Baxter lose, Lewis would enter the night’s final game knowing he needs to defeat Phil Taylor for the first time on television, as well as overhaul a leg difference deficit with the players above him, if he was to finish fourth.
“If I win, I might still have a chance of qualifying and that’s how I will prepare for the match,” said Lewis. “If I want to qualify then I have to beat Phil and that would prove I deserve to be in the play-offs.
“At the beginning of the league I wouldn’t have expected to be in this position, because I’d have wanted to have qualified before the last week, but I’m still in with a shot.”
Taylor is bidding to end the league phase unbeaten should he avoid defeat against Stoke rival Lewis, and said: “I am going to go up there and enjoy the game.
“Adrian always gets up for matches against me and it could be crucial for him, but I won’t be doing him any favours.”
While Lewis could finish fourth, a loss to Taylor may also mean he slips to a seventh in the final table if Raymond van Barneveld ends the season with a third successive victory.
“I’ve got no pressure and all the pressure will be on Ronnie,” said van Barneveld. “I just want to finish as high as I can in the table and the way I’ve been playing I wish the Premier League was running for another five weeks now!
“I’ve lost eight games this season and that’s disappointing for me but I can’t control my opponent or what happens in Adrian’s game. All I can do is play good darts.”
Over 4,000 tickets have already been sold for the event, but the final few tickets remain on sale on 0844 124 624 or from www.trentfmarenanottingham.com.
Whyte & Mackay Premier League Darts
Night 14, Trent FM Arena, Nottingham
Terry Jenkins v James Wade
Ronnie Baxter v Raymond van Barneveld
Simon Whitlock v Mervyn King
Phil Taylor v Adrian Lewis
Live on Sky Sports HD 2 from 7pm
Fans outside the UK and Ireland can watch live through www.pdc.tv
Sky Bet Match Odds
Terry Jenkins 4/1, Draw 9/2, James Wade 2/5
Ronnie Baxter 2/1, Draw 7/2, Raymond van Barneveld 5/6
Simon Whitlock 5/6, Draw 7/2, Mervyn King 2/1
Phil Taylor 3/10, Draw 9/2, Adrian Lewis 11/2
Sky Bet are the official bookmaker of the Whyte & Mackay Premier League Darts. Odds correct at 12pm on Wednesday May 12.
Latest League Table
|
P |
W |
D |
L |
+/- |
LWAT |
Pts |
|
|
Phil Taylor |
13 |
11 |
2 |
0 |
+51 |
42 |
24 |
|
Simon Whitlock |
13 |
6 |
2 |
5 |
+3 |
34 |
14 |
|
Mervyn King |
13 |
5 |
3 |
5 |
+3 |
32 |
13 |
|
Ronnie Baxter |
13 |
4 |
5 |
4 |
-1 |
36 |
13 |
|
James Wade |
13 |
4 |
4 |
5 |
-4 |
27 |
12 |
|
Adrian Lewis |
13 |
4 |
3 |
6 |
-9 |
28 |
11 |
|
R v Barneveld |
13 |
4 |
1 |
8 |
-21 |
27 |
9 |
|
Terry Jenkins |
13 |
3 |
2 |
8 |
-22 |
26 |
8 |
Play-Off Race – How It Stands
James Wade
* a win moves him onto 14 points, and he would then need King or Baxter to lose, or for Whitlock to lose by enough legs to drop below him on leg difference
* a draw moves him onto 13 points, and he would need Baxter to lose by more than three legs
* cannot qualify with a defeat
Ronnie Baxter
* a win means he qualifies
* a draw moves him onto 14 points and would probably be enough for him to qualify, unless Wade had won by four or more legs
* would still qualify with a defeat should Wade and Lewis both lose
Simon Whitlock
* qualifies with a win or a draw
* should Wade and Baxter both win, could drop to fifth if he loses to King
Mervyn King
* qualifies with a win
* a draw moves him onto 14 points and would probably be enough to qualify, unless Wade whitewashed Jenkins earlier to overhaul the leg difference deficit
* would still qualify with a defeat should Baxter lose and Wade not win
Adrian Lewis
* needs Baxter to lose and Wade to lose or draw, and he has to defeat Phil Taylor by enough legs to overhaul his leg difference deficit with Baxter
Cleggy’s Betting Predictions for this week’s Premier league
Who will be the Sheriff in Nottingham?
Consistency is the key for Nottingham…
After dethroning the King in typical Robin Hood-style last week in Newcastle, Barney has to contend with the Rocket in Nottingham on Thursday on what promises to be a cracking night of Dartistry in the East Midlands. Raymond also managed to notch himself a nine darter up in Geordie-land and will be hoping that his bow and arrows are in similar sharp-shooting prowess on Thursday. It is such a shame that Barney hasn’t played like his old self throughout the campaign; let’s face it, he’s been about as consistent as Nottingham Forest’s play-off record: narrowly winning the odd game only to be battered into submission in the next, in front of all your adoring fans, letting them down again and again and again…
Ronnie Baxter, however, reminds me of Blackpool rock: he’s tough and gets stuck in, as opposed to Barney and Nottingham Forest, who have been more like those hideous talking, music playing dolls you buy as a joke. They seem like a good idea to watch at the time, then they become annoying and repetitive…and frustrating and not good enough and a let down and a waste of money and lazy…sorry I was drifting off for a minute.
Despite Ronnie’s better season, Barney will fight on Thursday like Forest failed to on Tuesday and will do the Machine and Jackpot a favour as he inflicts Ronnie’s fifth defeat of the season. Get on Raymond.
Switch the power on, Phil!
Terry-Bull Jenkins gave the Power a fright last week by staying close to him. Well, I say close, a three leg loss to Phil is quite a result these days. Now, if Adie plays as he can, he will stay close to Phil; alas, when does this happen? The Jackpot rarely plays as his name suggests he should which is why he is languishing one place above the aforementioned Neverlander, Raymond, in sixth position. Trust me, I would love to say that ‘this one will be close’, or ‘Phil will be beaten, at last!’ BUT I can’t, I’m afraid. Taylor will Phil his boots and stick his other boot right down Adie’s semi-final chances. Jackpot for Lewis? Wooden spoon’s more likely…
The booze may work in Merv’s favour…
I hear the boos will be flowing in Nottingham this week. Well, at my house it certainly will. Now I love homophones and maybe Merv should too. If he convinces himself that the crowd are shouting for ‘booze’ as he walks out on stage, and in turn furnishes the crowd with a plethora of real ales, I am sure he would become a hero! Alternatively he could open a barrel of cheap lager and soak the lot of the disrespectful dimwits: either way, it will be much more successful than getting ‘wound up’ and losing one’s cool, wouldn’t it, Merv? There is no disputing that the King is class and WILL make this year’s final [you heard it here first] but first he must make the wizard Whitlock vanish from second spot, which he will do in Thursday’s four-pointer. The King will rain on the Wizard’s parade (homophones again…) and get his campaign back on track after a disappointing defeat to Barney last week.
Locked Horns
The aforementioned (twice in one piece) Bully will rage against the Machine, James Wade, this week and this is one James must win. This match is very difficult to call as Wadey aims to bounce back from a heavy mauling at the hands of the Wizard in Newcastle. Bounce back he will but he will bounce straight into the Bull’s horns and they will lock together at 7-7.
Doubles for Dough
Get on the King to beat Whitlock and Wade/Jenkins draw. This double should be around 10/1 and any respectable Turf Accountants!
Trebles for Show
Taylor/Barney/King all to win. This treble won’t win you a fortune but everyone likes a successful threes-up. Get on it.
Tags: Premier League Darts, Preview
Filed under PDC, Premier League Darts |