South African Masters (darts)

The Emperors Palace South African Masters was a darts tournament organised by the Professional Darts Corporation which began in 2007, so-named because it took place at the Emperors Palace entertainment resort in Johannesburg, South Africa.

Emperors Palace South African Masters
Tournament information
VenueEmperors Palace
LocationJohannesburg
CountrySouth Africa
Established2007
Organisation(s)PDC
FormatLegs
Prize fund£15,000 (2009)
Month(s) PlayedSeptember
Current champion(s)
England Phil Taylor

Format and qualification edit

The tournament had 8 players, 4 of which were the top ranked players on the PDC Order of Merit and the semi-finalists, runner up and winner of the PDC South African Open which takes place the day before. The four players chosen by the PDC were drawn up against the qualifiers from the PDC South African Open in a knock-out tournament. In 2007, Phil Taylor, Raymond van Barneveld, James Wade and Terry Jenkins, ranked numbers one to four in the Order of Merit respectively at the time, participated in the tournament. In the following year, Taylor and Wade, returned to the tournament, being ranked numbers one and three in the world at the time. John Part, ranked number four in the world, also participated, as did Wayne Mardle, who replaced Barneveld (ranked second) due to the Dutchman's two month sabbatical from darts. Taylor, Wade, Part and Mervyn King took part in the 2009 tournament.

Matches were as follows:

  • Quarter-final: best of 7 legs
  • Semi-final: Best of 9 legs (formerly in 2007 best of 11 legs)
  • Final: Best of 11 legs (formerly in 2007 best of 15 legs, in 2008 best of 9 legs)

Since the 2010 tournament, the event is the direct qualification tournament for the World Darts Championship for South African darts players.

Television edit

The tournament was broadcast live on SuperSport in South Africa. In the United Kingdom, the tournament was broadcast on Challenge in 2007, Nuts TV in 2008, and Sky Sports in 2009.

Results edit

2007 edit

[1]

Quarter-finals
Best of 7 legs
Semi-finals
Best of 11 legs
Final
Best of 15 legs
  Phil Taylor 4
  Mike Ryder 0   Phil Taylor 6
  Terry Jenkins 4   Terry Jenkins 4
  Paul Meyer 0   Phil Taylor 8
  Raymond van Barneveld 4   Raymond van Barneveld 6
  Charles Losper 1   Raymond van Barneveld 6
  James Wade 4   James Wade 5
  Lodewyk Marais 0

2008 edit

[2]

Quarter-finals
Best of 7 legs
Semi-finals
Best of 9 legs
Final
Best of 9 legs
  John Part 4
  Mark Jackson 0   John Part 5
  James Wade 4   James Wade 1
  Les Francis 1   John Part 2
  Wayne Mardle 4   Phil Taylor 5
  Charles Losper 1   Wayne Mardle 2
  Phil Taylor 4   Phil Taylor 5
  Shawn Hogan 1

2009 edit

[3]

Quarter-finals
Best of 7 legs
Semi-finals
Best of 9 legs
Final
Best of 11 legs
  Phil Taylor 4
  Christo Meiring 1   Phil Taylor 5
  John Part 4   John Part 2
  Devon Petersen 1   Phil Taylor 6
  James Wade 4   James Wade 4
  Wynand Havenga 1   James Wade 5
  Mervyn King 4   Mervyn King 4
  Les Francis 1
  • During the fifth leg of the semi-final between James Wade and Mervyn King, King hit the first ever televised nine-dart finish outside of Europe. He hit two consecutive 180s, and then used T20, T19, D12 to complete the perfect leg. King went 4–1 up as a result of that leg, but still lost the match 5–4.

Previous winners edit

Year Champion Score Runner-up Total prize money Winner's prize
2007   Phil Taylor 8–6   Raymond van Barneveld £15,000 £5,000
2008   Phil Taylor 5–2   John Part £15,000 £5,000
2009   Phil Taylor 6–4   James Wade £15,000 £5,000


World Darts Championship Qualification Tournament

Year Champion Score Runner-up Semi-finalist 1
(lost to Champion)
Semi-finalist 2
(lost to Runner-Up)
2006   Wynand Havenga 4–1   Paul Meyer   Paul McMahon   Roshan Sivraman
2007   Charles Losper 4–0   Lodewyk Marais   Mike Ryder   Paul Meyer
2008   Charles Losper 4–1   Mark Jackson   Shawn Hogan   Les Francis
2009   Les Francis 4–3   Devon Petersen   Wynand Havenga   Christo Meiring
2010   Devon Petersen 5–4   Les Francis   Charles Losper   Jeff Waterman
2011   Devon Petersen beat   Nolan Arendse   Brent Robertson   Gary Dowman
2012   Charl Pietersen 8–1   Charles Losper   Shawn Hogan   Jason Hendricks
2013   Devon Petersen 9–3   Graham Filby   Charles Losper   Charl Petersen
2014   Nolan Arendse 9–5   Devon Petersen   Shawn Hogan   Charl Pietersen
2015   Warrick Scheffer 9–2   Clifford Stradling   Charl Pietersen   Charles Losper
2021   Cameron Carolissen 9–8   Charles Losper   Carl Gabriel   Warrick Scheffer
2022   Stefan Vermaak 9–8   Charles Losper   Shawn Hogan   Cameron Carolissen
2023   Wynand Havenga 7–0   Deon Oliver   Charles Losper   Stefan Vermaak

References edit

  1. ^ "2007 Emperors Palace South African Masters Results". Darts Database. Retrieved 29 November 2011.
  2. ^ "2008 Emperors Palace South African Masters Results". Darts Database. Retrieved 29 November 2011.
  3. ^ "2009 Emperors Palace South African Masters Results". Darts Database. Retrieved 29 November 2011.