The PDC Order of Merit is a world ranking system used by one of the darts organisations, the Professional Darts Corporation (PDC). Following the 2007 PDC World Darts Championship it superseded a world ranking system based on points being awarded for performances in ranking tournaments.[1]

How it works

The Order of Merit is similar to that employed in golf's European Tour. Prize money won during the previous two seasons is calculated and the rankings are determined from this money list. The Professional Darts Corporation adopted an Order of Merit system in 2007, which is based on prize money won over two years for the main Order of Merit and separate one-year rankings for other PDC Pro Tour events.

PDC Top 64 Order of Merit

PDC Order of Merit as of 3 January 2024.[2]
Players ranked 1 - 32
Rank Change Player Earnings
1Increase 2  Luke Humphries£1,495,500
2Steady  Michael van Gerwen£1,132,250
3Decrease 2  Michael Smith£1,106,250
4Increase 2  Nathan Aspinall£637,500
5Steady  Gerwyn Price£637,250
6Increase 2  Rob Cross£590,500
7Steady  Danny Noppert£527,750
8Decrease 4  Peter Wright£511,250
9Steady  Jonny Clayton£490,000
10Increase 1  Dave Chisnall£489,500
11Decrease 1  Damon Heta£478,250
12Increase 2  Joe Cullen£440,750
13Decrease 1  Dirk van Duijvenbode£438,750
14Increase 1  Dimitri Van den Bergh£408,000
15Increase 2  Chris Dobey£378,750
16Increase 2  Stephen Bunting£371,250
17Decrease 1  Ross Smith£371,000
18Increase 2  Andrew Gilding£358,000
19Decrease 6  James Wade£349,000
20Decrease 1  Ryan Searle£334,750
21Increase 2  Josh Rock£324,500
22Steady  Gabriel Clemens£321,000
23Increase 3  Martin Schindler£300,250
24Steady  Krzysztof Ratajski£298,500
25Steady  José de Sousa£274,000
26Increase 1  Daryl Gurney£269,250
27Decrease 6  Gary Anderson£267,250
28Steady  Brendan Dolan£259,000
29Steady  Raymond van Barneveld£230,500
30Increase 22  Scott Williams£205,750
31Increase 133  Luke Littler£202,500
32Decrease 1  Kim Huybrechts£186,750
*Change since 26 November 2023.
PDC Order of Merit as of 3 January 2024.[2]
Players ranked 33 - 64
Rank Change Player Earnings
33Decrease 1  Madars Razma£175,750
34Decrease 4  Callan Rydz£170,750
35Increase 1  Martin Lukeman£163,500
36Increase 3  Ricardo Pietreczko£157,250
37Decrease 2  Ryan Joyce£151,250
38Decrease 5  Luke Woodhouse£150,250
39Decrease 2  Mike De Decker£139,000
40Increase 7  Jim Williams£137,750
41Steady  Keane Barry£128,500
42Decrease 4  William O'Connor£128,250
43Increase 2  Gian van Veen£122,500
44Decrease 1  Simon Whitlock£120,250
45Decrease 11  Alan Soutar£118,500
46Increase 7  Ricky Evans£115,500
47Increase 4  Jermaine Wattimena£113,500
48Increase 9  Matt Campbell£113,250
49Decrease 1  Rowby-John Rodriguez£111,500
50Decrease 1  Steve Beaton£111,250
51Increase 10  Boris Krčmar£101,750
52Decrease 8  Adrian Lewis£101,250
53Decrease 11  Vincent van der Voort£97,000
54Increase 9  Cameron Menzies£94,500
55Decrease 5  Mensur Suljović£94,000
56Increase 8  Mickey Mansell£93,500
57Increase 5  Jamie Hughes£91,250
58Decrease 2  Ritchie Edhouse£89,500
59Decrease 5  Ryan Meikle£87,000
60Decrease 1  Florian Hempel£86,750
61Decrease 1  Adam Gawlas£86,500
62Increase 4  Kevin Doets£83,500
63Decrease 23  Mervyn King£81,750
64Decrease 9  Ian White£80,750
*Change since 26 November 2023.
Click "show" to view players ranked outside top 64
PDC Order of Merit as of 3 January 2024.[2]
Players ranked 65th or lower
Rank Change Player Earnings
65Increase 14  Richard Veenstra£67,500
66Increase 17  Niels Zonneveld£51,500
67Increase 25  Lee Evans£45,000
68Increase 20  Dylan Slevin£42,750
69Increase 30  Keegan Brown£32,750
70Increase 23  Maik Kuivenhoven£29,750
71Increase 24  Jeffrey de Zwaan£28,500
72Increase 25  Stephen Burton£27,250
73Increase 25  Daniel Klose£26,000
74Increase 31  Karel Sedláček£22,000
75Increase 33  Arron Monk£20,000
76Increase 33  Jurjen van der Velde£19,750
77Increase 34  Robert Owen£18,000
78Increase 33  Jeffrey Sparidaans£18,000
79Increase 32  Pascal Rupprecht£18,000
80Increase 37  Graham Usher£15,750
81Increase 37  Josh Payne£15,500
82Increase 36  Graham Hall£15,500
83Increase 39  Nick Kenny£13,750
84Increase 38  Adam Smith-Neale£13,750
85Increase 39  Geert Nentjes£13,500
86Increase 41  Ronny Huybrechts£12,250
87Increase 42  Owen Roelofs£11,000
88Increase 43  Adam Warner£10,000
89Increase 43  Danny van Trijp£9,500
90Increase 45  Robbie Knops£8,750
91Increase 47  Callum Goffin£7,750
92Increase 60  Jacques Labre£4,750
93Increase 68  Christian Perez£3,000
*Change since 26 November 2023.

Secondary Orders of Merit

In addition to the main two-year Order of Merit, the PDC also operates secondary Orders of Merit for their different tours. These include the:

  • ProTour Order of Merit, which counts money earned in Players Championships and European Tour events over a 12-month rolling period. In addition to qualification for televised tournaments, this ranking determines the seedings for Pro Tour events.[3]
  • European Tour Order of Merit, which counts money earned in European Tour events during the calendar year. The top 32 on this ranking list comprise the qualifiers for the European Championship, all seeded, at the end of the year.[4]
  • Players Championship Order of Merit, which counts money earned in Player Championship events during the calendar year. The top 64 on this ranking list are the seeded qualifiers to the Players Championship Finals.[5]
  • Challenge Tour Order of Merit, which counts money earned on the Challenge Tour (by non Tour Card holders that participated in Q-School) during the calendar year. The top players at the end of the year qualify for the World Championship, UK Open, and receive Tour Cards.[6]
  • Development Tour Order of Merit, which counts money earned on the Development Tour (by Tour Card holders and non Tour Card holders alike, aged 16–23) during the calendar year. The top players at the end of the year qualify for the World Championship, UK Open, and receive Tour Cards.[7]
  • Women's Series Order of Merit, which was introduced in 2021 after the first women's series events were introduced in 2020.[8] The tournament series qualifies two women to the Grand Slam, and World Championship.[9]

Player exemptions and seedings

The PDC rankings from all orders of merit determine exemptions from the qualifying competitions and seedings for all televised events. Additionally, the orders of merit are used to offer tour cards for the following year.

PDC Order of Merit Exemptions[8]
Tournament Qualifiers (seeds)
By Order of Merit Other
Main PT ET PC CT DT WS
Ranked televised events
World Championship 32 (32) 32 2 2 2 26
UK Open TCH 8 8 16
World Matchplay 16 (16) 16
World Grand Prix 16 (8) 16
European Championship 32 (32)
Grand Slam of Darts 0 (8) 2 2 2 18
Players Championship Finals 64 (64)
PDC Pro Tour
European Tour events 16 (16) 32
Players Championship events TCH 0 (32)
Non-ranked televised events
The Masters 24 (24)
Premier League Darts 4 4
Champions League of Darts 8 (8)
Tour Cards 64 2 2 var

Ranking Tournaments

The PDC holds a variety of ranked and unranked televised tournaments throughout the year. There are an additional selection of ranked floor and streamed tournaments that comprise the PDC Pro Tour, as well as unranked secondary tours and events such as the Challenge Tour, Development Tour, and event qualifiers. Money earned in all ranking events counts toward the Order of Merit, with none counting from the unranked events.[8]

PDC Ranking Tournaments with Payouts[8]
Tournament Prize money
Total Champion Runner-up Semi-finalists Top 8 Top 16 Top 32 Top 64 Top 96 Top 128
Ranked televised events
World Championship £2,500,000 £500,000 £200,000 £100,000 £50,000 £35,000 £25,000 £15,000 £7,500
UK Open £600,000 £110,000 £50,000 £30,000 £15,000 £10,000 £5,000 £2,500 £1,500 £1,000
World Matchplay £800,000 £200,000 £100,000 £50,000 £30,000 £15,000 £10,000
World Grand Prix £600,000 £120,000 £60,000 £40,000 £25,000 £15,000 £7,500
European Championship £600,000 £120,000 £60,000 £40,000 £25,000 £15,000 £7,500
Grand Slam of Darts[upper-alpha 1] £650,000 £150,000 £70,000 £50,000 £25,000 £12,250 £5,000[upper-alpha 2]
Players Championship Finals £600,000 £120,000 £60,000 £30,000 £20,000 £10,000 £6,500 £3,000
PDC Pro Tour[upper-alpha 3]
13 European Tour events £175,000 £30,000 £12,000 £8,500 £6,000 £4,000 £2,500[upper-alpha 4] £1,250[upper-alpha 5]
30 Players Championship events £100,000 £12,000 £8,000 £4,000 £3,000 £2,000 £1,250 £750
Total yearly ranking payouts £11,625,000 £2,070,000 £996,000 £1,141,000 £1,432,000 £1,822,000 £2,208,000 £1,636,000 £288,000 £32,000
  1. The Grand Slam pays an additional £3,500 to the 8 group winners.
  2. The Grand Slam pays £8,000 and £5,000 for third and fourth place finishers respectively in the group stage, which comprise the top 32.
  3. The 2020 PDC Pro Tour was reduced to 4 European Tour events and 23 Players Championships due to the COVID-19 pandemic.
  4. The 16 seeded players at a European Tour event do not receive money toward OoM for a top 32 finish.
  5. European Tour events pay out to 48 players (the complete field).

Unranked Tournaments

The PDC operates additional unranked tournaments for tour card holders and occasional qualifiers throughout the year. This includes five televised premier invitational events comprising the Premier League, Champions League of Darts, World Series of Darts Finals, The Masters, and the World Cup of Darts pairs event.[10][11] Although none of these events count toward the Order of Merit, they all award some number of tournament spots based on Order of Merit position. Additionally there are usually five to seven World Series of Darts events scheduled across the globe each year with eight top PDC players seeded over eight local qualifiers.[8]

Secondary Tours and Tournaments

The PDC also offers secondary tours that do not count toward the main Order of Merit, but do each include their own confined orders of merit. The Challenge Tour is open to any players who played at the most recent Q-School but failed to earn a tour card. Throughout the year, the top players on the Challenge Tour OoM are invited to fill openings on the Pro Tour, receive invitations to the World Championship and UK Open, and at the end of the year receive tour cards for the next two years.[8]

The Development Tour is open to players outside of the top 32 on the main Order of Merit who are between the ages of 16 and 23. Similarly to the Challenge Tour, the top players on the Development Tour order of merit receive tour cards and invitations to the UK Open and World Championship. Additionally, 96 players - comprising 16 invitations, tour card holders of the appropriate age, and Development Tour competitors - partake in the World Youth Championship. Although this championship does not count toward any order of merit, there is a £60,000 payout, and the finalists receive tour cards as well as berths in the Grand Slam and World Championship.[8]

Previous world ranking system

Under the previous ranking points system, Colin Lloyd was the world number one player in the PDC for most of 2005 and 2006, despite most of the major titles being shared between Phil Taylor, Raymond van Barneveld and John Part. Although Lloyd also won two major titles, he often accumulated ranking points in the less prestigious non-televised events, in which Taylor did not always compete. Similarly, Alan Warriner was world number one on four occasions before ever winning his first and only PDC major, the 2001 Grand Prix, while Taylor won eight world championships and a host of other titles during that period.

Previous World Number Ones

PDC Ranking Leaders Timeline[12]

13 players have held the position of World Number One since the World Darts Council started new rankings in 1993. Seven different players held the position in the old points system, and seven players have held the position since the PDC switched to the two-year earnings based Order of Merit system in 2007, with Phil Taylor being the only player to have been number one in both eras.

Player # Years in which player stood Number 1
England Phil Taylor 13
  • 1996
  • 2000
  • 2002
  • 2003
  • 2004
  • 2006
  • 2007
  • 2008
  • 2009
  • 2010
  • 2011
  • 2012
  • 2013
Netherlands Michael van Gerwen 7
  • 2014
  • 2015
  • 2016
  • 2017
  • 2018
  • 2019
  • 2020
England Alan Warriner 6
  • 1993
  • 1994
  • 1997
  • 1998
  • 2001
  • 2002
England Rod Harrington 5
  • 1995
  • 1996
  • 1998
  • 1999
  • 2000
England Colin Lloyd 3
  • 2005
  • 2006
  • 2007
England Dennis Priestley 2
  • 1994
  • 1995
England Peter Manley 2
  • 2000
  • 2001
Wales Gerwyn Price 2
  • 2021
  • 2022
Netherlands Raymond van Barneveld 1 2008
Canada John Part 1 2003
Scotland Peter Wright 1 2022
England Michael Smith 1 2023
England Luke Humphries 1 2024
Italic indicates the player was reigning world champion that year
Bold indicates the player stood number one at the conclusion of that year's world championship

Periods

No. Player(s) From Length Ref.
1  Alan Warriner-Little January 1993 Incarnation of the WDC 674 days[upper-alpha 1] [12]
2  Dennis Priestley 6 November 1994 1994 Lada UK Masters 155 [12][13]
3  Rod Harrington 10 April 1995 1995 UK Matchplay 479 days[upper-alpha 1] [12][13]
4  Phil Taylor August 1996 31 days[upper-alpha 1] [12][13]
 Alan Warriner-Little (2) September 1996 699 days[upper-alpha 1] [12][13]
 Rod Harrington (2) 1 August 1998 1998 World Matchplay 728 days [12][13]
 Phil Taylor (2) 29 July 2000 2000 World Matchplay 57 days [12][13]
5  Peter Manley 24 September 2000 2000 Windy City Open 399 days [12][13]
 Alan Warriner-Little (3) 28 October 2001 2001 World Grand Prix 69 days [12][13]
Alan Warriner-Little (4) and Phil Taylor (3) 5 January 2002 2002 World Championship 28 days [12][13]
 Alan Warriner-Little (5) 2 February 2002 2002 Eastbourne Open 88 days[upper-alpha 1] [12][13]
 Phil Taylor (4) May 2002 248 days[upper-alpha 1] [12][13]
6  John Part 4 January 2003 2003 World Championship 203 days [12][13]
 Phil Taylor (5) 26 July 2003 2003 Bobby Bourn Memorial Trophy 582 days [12][13]
7  Colin Lloyd 27 February 2005 2005 West Tyrone Open 469 days [14][13]
 Phil Taylor (6) 11 June 2006 2006 UK Open 7 days [15][16]
 Colin Lloyd (2) 18 June 2006 2006 Players Championship 3 197 days [16][13]
 Phil Taylor (7) 1 January 2007 2007 World Championship 365 days [12][13]
8  Raymond van Barneveld 1 January 2008 2008 World Championship 159 days [17][13]
 Phil Taylor (8) 8 June 2008 2008 UK Open 2,033 days [17][18]
9  Michael van Gerwen 1 January 2014 2014 World Championship 2,559 days [18][19]
10  Gerwyn Price 3 January 2021 2021 World Championship 427 days [19][20]
11  Peter Wright 6 March 2022 2022 UK Open 140 days [20][21]
 Gerwyn Price (2) 24 July 2022 2022 World Matchplay 77 days [21]
 Peter Wright (2) 9 October 2022 2022 World Grand Prix 21 days [22]
 Gerwyn Price (3) 30 October 2022 2022 European Championship 65 days [22][23]
12  Michael Smith 3 January 2023 2023 World Championship 365 days [23]
13  Luke Humphries 3 January 2024 2024 World Championship 13 days
  1. 1 2 3 4 5 6 Uses 1st of month where exact date unknown.
Key
Before January 2007 Used old points system
Current Reigning number one on Order of Merit

First WDC/PDC rankings

Following the World Darts Council (now PDC) split from the British Darts Organisation during 1992-94 the WDC drew up its first ranking list in the run-up to its inaugural 1994 World Championship. Mike Gregory and Chris Johns later went back to the BDO set up and Bobby George and many of the non-UK players never competed in the early days of the WDC.

Ranking Player   Ranking Player
1 England Alan Warriner 16 Denmark Jann Hoffmann
2 England Rod Harrington = Wales Chris Johns
3 England Phil Taylor = Netherlands Roland Scholten
4 England John Lowe 19 Netherlands Raymond van Barneveld
5 England Mike Gregory = England Keith Deller
6 England Peter Evison 21 England Bobby George
7 England Kevin Spiolek 22 Denmark Per Skau
= England Dennis Priestley 23 Germany Bernd Hebecker
9 England Bob Anderson = Germany Andree Welge
10 Scotland Jocky Wilson = Belgium Pascal Rabau
11 Scotland Jamie Harvey 26 Belgium Leo Laurens
12 England Eric Bristow = Netherlands Bert Vlaardingerbroek
13 England Cliff Lazarenko = Republic of Ireland Tom Kirby
14 Sweden Magnus Caris = Australia Wayne Weening
= England Steve Beaton = Finland Mauro Levy

See also

References

  1. "PDC Rankings". Global Darts. Retrieved 18 October 2020.
  2. 1 2 3 "PDC Order of Merit". PDPA. 3 January 2024. Retrieved 3 January 2024.
  3. "ProTour Order of Merit". PDC. Retrieved 7 January 2021.
  4. "2020 European Tour Order of Merit". PDC. Retrieved 7 January 2021.
  5. "Players Championship Order of Merit". PDC. Retrieved 7 January 2021.
  6. "Challenge Tour Order of Merit". PDC. Retrieved 7 January 2021.
  7. "Development Tour Order of Merit". PDC. Retrieved 7 January 2021.
  8. 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 "PDC Order of Merit Rules". PDC. Retrieved 23 October 2020.
  9. "2023 PDC Women's Series Order of Merit". Retrieved 15 October 2023.
  10. "Champions League of Darts: BBC to broadcast inaugural tournament". BBC Sport. Retrieved 9 February 2016.
  11. "2015 Masters held in Milton Keynes". PDC. Retrieved 16 January 2015.
  12. 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 "List of Former World Number Ones". PDPA. Retrieved 10 October 2020.
  13. 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 "Darts Database Player Stats". Darts Database. Retrieved 14 November 2020.
  14. "Lloydy on top of the World". PDC. Retrieved 13 November 2020.
  15. "Taylor Regains Number One Spot". PDC. 12 June 2006. Retrieved 13 November 2020.
  16. 1 2 "Lloyd Confirmed As Number One". PDC.
  17. 1 2 "Taylor Back on Top". PDC. 9 June 2008. Retrieved 13 November 2020.
  18. 1 2 Walters, Mike (1 January 2014). "Michael van Gerwen is Ladbrokes PDC World Darts Champion after beating Peter Wright". Mirror. Retrieved 13 November 2020.
  19. 1 2 Allen, Dave (4 January 2021). "A number one hit! Price joins exclusive list to top rankings". PDC.
  20. 1 2 "Peter Wright is world number one darts player after Gerwyn Price fails to reach UK Open final". Sporting Life. Retrieved 6 March 2022.
  21. 1 2 Gorton, Josh. "Price denies De Sousa in Winter Gardens thriller to seal semi-final spot". PDC. Retrieved 24 July 2022.
  22. 1 2 "PRICE REGAINS WORLD NUMBER ONE SPOT, ROSS SMITH INTO TOP 20 AFTER MAIDEN MAJOR WIN IN UPDATED PDC ORDER OF MERIT AFTER EUROPEAN CHAMPIONSHIP". Darts News. 31 October 2022. Retrieved 13 January 2023.
  23. 1 2 "Michael Smith beats Michael van Gerwen to win first world title with 'best leg of darts ever'". ESPN. 4 January 2023. Retrieved 13 January 2023.
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