That’s all for our coverage of a memorable final. It was the night when one of the nice guys finally completed his Homeric journey to greatness, and won the greatest leg in darts history to boot. Michael Smith is now world champion and world No1, and who knows what this victory will empower him to achieve.
The first half of the match was an exhilarating ding-dong, the second a largely one-sided exhibition. Van Gerwen was below his best, with his average dropping just below 100 for the first time in the tournament, but the main reason for that was the relentless pressure he was under because of Smith’s scoring.
It’s still been a great tournament for Van Gerwen, who played his best darts in maybe five years, but in the end he met somebody who could live with his scoring and even surpass it. Smith wasn’t always at his best in this tournament – he was 3-1 down to Martin Schindler in the last 32 – but he peaked when it mattered.
In the last two months, it’s all gone – all the stuff bout him being a bottler, all the fair comments about him being the best player never to win a major, then the best player never to win a world title. He’s at the top table now, and with his natural ability and newfound mental strength there’s every chance he’ll stay there for the next 15 years. Thanks for your company, goodnight!
Updated
The updated world rankings
Michael Smith
Peter Wright
Michael van Gerwen
Gerwyn Price
Luke Humphries
Rob Cross
Jonny Clayton
Danny Noppert
Nathan Aspinall
James Wade
A reminder of the greatest leg in darts history
THE BEST LEG OF ALL TIME! 🤯🔥
— PDC Darts (@OfficialPDC) January 3, 2023
MICHAEL VAN GERWEN MISSES D12 FOR A NINE-DARTER, AND THEN SMITH PINS A PERFECT LEG HIMSELF!
ONE OF THE GREATEST THINGS YOU'LL EVER SEE IN SPORT. pic.twitter.com/WyKWFcxq5V
One last word from Michael Smith
[This must be the greatest moment of your life?] Nah, the two greatest moments of my life are sat over there, both my kids. But if I didn’t have kids, that would be! I don’t think it’ll ever topped – even if I win a second, it’ll never top how I felt just then.
More from Michael Smith
It’s 1-1 now in the worlds. I took my chances, but he knows and I do that it won’t be the last world final between us. He is the best player in darts, I’ve said it for years, and you have to take your chances and I finally did that. I don’t wanna say too much, I don’t even know what to say…
[MvG interrupts]
Nah nah nah, he’s not doing his game justice. He played phenomenally, we all know that. Fair play to him, he deserved it.
Updated
Michael van Gerwen speaks
He played really well. I had my chances, we all know that: second set, seventh set, ninth set. When you don’t hit them, he’ll throw everything at you. You can only blame yourself, but it doesn’t take anything away [from Smith] because he played brilliantly all the way through. I wasn’t what I wanted to be, but that’s part of the game and you have to take it on the chin.
It’s part of the job unfonrtunately. When we celebrate it’s a nice job, and when we lose games it’s hard. We all know that. The hardest thing is that I have take it on my chin and, ah… [fades out]
Michael Smith speaks
[You’re world champion and world No1, how does that sound?] Sounds amazing. I don’t want to start getting into the crying and emotions. Michael let me off there, and for once I finally took a chance I didn’t deserve [his voice is cracking, god love him]. I want to apologise to Michael, I’ve been in that position… well not in that position before. I don’t even what to say to you!
I didn’t hit a nine-darter in practice today but I keep going 180, 180, miss, so I thought, ‘Do one now, give the crowd what they deserve.’
I wanna do what this man’s [Van Gerwen] done, I wanna take over the sport. But he’s still here!
Updated
The last leg
MICHAEL SMITH IS CHAMPION OF THE WORLD! 🏆
— PDC Darts (@OfficialPDC) January 3, 2023
The man who was born to be World Champion fulfils his destiny, as Michael Smith defeats Michael van Gerwen 7-4 to claim the biggest prize in darts and become world number one!
Dare to dream. pic.twitter.com/36PxPY5W8q
Michael Smith still can’t quite take it in. He’s on his haunches, trying to make sense of it all. But he soon will, because he’s about to lift the Sid Waddell Trophy. He walks over, tenderly touches it and then raises it – and it’s a heavy bugger – high above his head in triumph. I feel sorry for his liver tonight.
Smith runs straight off the stage, into the arms of his family, then clenches his fists to the crowd. MvG, a class act in defeat, applauds and shakes Smith’s hand. Finally Smith goes back onto the stage to shake hands with the officials; I think we’ll forgive him that little slip in etiquette. Smith again clenches his fists to the crowd, and Van Gerwen again joins the applause. There’s so much respect between these two.
This has been coming for a long time, and surely nobody will begrudge one of the nice guys of darts. Two months ago, Twitter’s finest said he was the biggest bottler in darts. Now he’s the biggest thing in darts: world champion, world No1, a rare talent who took a circuitous route to greatness. He’s there now.
Updated
MICHAEL SMITH IS THE WORLD CHAMPION!!!!
Smith 7-4 Van Gerwen (legs 3-2) Michael Smith has sprinted over the finish line. He hit back-to-back 180s at the start of the leg, and though there was no nine-darter, he hits D8 for a 13-darts. He’s done it! After all this time, all the heartbreak, he’s done it!
Updated
SMITH BREAKS! HE’S ONE AWAY!
Smith 6-4 Van Gerwen (legs 2-2) And now the pressure reverts to Van Gerwen, and Smith relaxes a little. After nine darts he is on 190, Smith on 121 for a massive break. Van Gerwen can only hit 58 to leave 132. Smith hits D20, D 11 – and just missed D14. MvG misses the bull for a 132, Smith hits D7 last dart in hand. HE’S THROWING FOR THE WORLD TITLE.
Smith 6-4 Van Gerwen (legs 1-2) Beautiful darts from Smith, who calmly takes out 106 for a much needed hold. If he breaks now, he’ll be throwing for the title.
Smith 6-4 Van Gerwen (legs 0-2) Now it’s Smith who is looking nervy, that metronomic action suddenly failing him. Van Gerwen doesn’t need to go for the bull with Smith on 192, and he hits D16 for a 16-darter.
VAN GERWEN BREAKS!
Smith 6-4 Van Gerwen (legs 0-1) Smith, throwing for the match in this set, starts with 36. MvG jumps all over it with 180, then 140, 121 and a clean 60 for an 11-darter. Now then. That was Van Gerwen’s best leg in about five sets.
Both the averages are lurking around a ton – Smith 100.72, Van Gerwen 99.09. It hasn’t been the all-time classic that some people said after three or four sets, but it has still been a belter.
“MvG really does need to provoke something to upset Smith- as happened last night with a bit of verbals from Dimitri Van den Bergh,” says Gary Naylor. “His ‘vital signs’ are too low - he needs that mood swing. I’d suggest he stands so close to Smith when he’s throwing that the referee has to intervene and MvG can get the blood pressure up and have a row. This title will slide away very quickly without it.”
It’s not generally in his nature to do something like that, though I agree that in the same situation Phil Taylor would be trying all sorts and probably succeeding. There’s been a lovely may-the-best-man win spirit to this game.
VAN GERWEN WINS THE TENTH SET!
Smith 6-4 Van Gerwen (legs 2-3) Van Gerwen is chasing trebles round the board, and he can’t find them. Smith keeps hitting the same treble, and gets two more before another bounceout denies him a possible 180.
He follows that with two trebleless visits – sound the finishlineitis klaxon – and MvG misses D20 for a 151. Smith, on 167, has another trebleless visit and Van Gerwen cleans up for an 18-darter. He’s still alive, just about, but Smith has the darts in set 11.
Updated
Smith 6-3 Van Gerwen (legs 2-2) Smith has a bounceout, and MvG jumps all over it with a 180. His next visit is desperate, just 59, and Smith has the darts again. He hits a 140 to leave 48, and takes it out in two darts.
Michael Smith is one leg away from becoming world champion, and world No1.
Smith 6-3 Van Gerwen (legs 1-2) “Darts is coming home,” sing the Ally Pally crowd. The last Englishman to win this tournament was Rob Cross in 2017-18; before that, Philip Taylor in 2012-13.
Van Gerwen has to hold here or Smith will be throwing for the match. He’s on 106 after 12, but he missed D16 and Smith has a chance at 136. He hits T20 but then T1 with the second dart, and Van Gerwen hits D8 with his first dart. Sheesh.
Smith 6-3 Van Gerwen (legs 1-1) Now then. Smith misses two at tops on his own throw – but Van Gerwen does likewise on tops and then D10. Smith eventually hits D10 for a precious 20-dart hold.
Smith 6-3 Van Gerwen (legs 0-1) How Van Gerwen needed that! It’s only a hold, but he took out 105 with Smith waiting on a two-dart finish. Had he lost that leg, it was over.
SMITH TAKES THE NINTH SET TO LEAD 6-3!
Smith 6-3 Van Gerwen (legs 3-0) We’ve waited a helluva long time for Michael Smith to achive greatness, but he’s doing it right now in front of our eyes. This is a brilliant performance – relaxed, fluent and increasingly unplayable. He wins another leg at a canter to move within one set of his first world title!
SMITH BREAKS!
Smith 5-3 Van Gerwen (legs 2-0) At the moment a 7-3 win for Smith is the most likely result. MvG has completely lost his rhythm, and his match average is about to drop below 100 for the first time. Smith misses D20 for a 145 – but even that doesn’t matter because MvG is back on 205. Smith misses two at tens but hits double five for another break. He has won eight of the last nine legs.
Smith 5-3 Van Gerwen (legs 1-0) Smith picks up where he left off before the break. MvG’s scoring has gone – he averaged 91 in the eighth set to Smith’s 105 – and Smith takes out 74 for a (relatively) comfortable 15-darter.
Michael Smith is throwing for a 6-3 lead. Last year he was 5-4 up before Peter Wright went berserk to win the last three sets.
Sky are pitching this as the best darts game ever. I wouldn’t quite that far but, well, who cares when it’s this good.
I literally can’t spake!!!!!!!! What a final! Enjoy. @SkySportsDarts MVG V SMITH.
— Wayne Mardle (@Wayne501Mardle) January 3, 2023
SMITH WINS THE EIGHTH SET!
Smith 5-3 Van Gerwen (legs 3-1) Yet another 180 for Smith, his 17th, puts him on 121 after nine. He has loads of time, with Van Gerwen way back, and he hits D8 for a 14-darter. At the moment, Smith is just too good. He has won three sets in a row, two of them against the darts, and he’s two away from the promised land.
Updated
Smith 4-3 Van Gerwen (legs 2-1) For the second time in the match, Smith is rampant. Van Gerwen is clinging on admirably, and hits 134 to leave 36 after 12. Smith can’t take out 164 and MvG does the necessary on D9.
And now Smith is throwing for a 5-3 lead.
Smith 4-3 Van Gerwen (legs 2-0) Another 180 for Van Gerwen, but it’s not enough: Smith has one dart for tops, with Van Gerwen waiting on 70, and he nails it! Smith has won five legs in a row.
SMITH BREAKS!
Smith 4-3 Van Gerwen (legs 1-0) Van Gerwen is being bullied by Smith’s scoring. He’s hanging in there, but he’s in trouble when Smith hits his 16th 180 to leave 136 after nine on the MvG throw. He can’t take it out, but MvG is nowhere near the 147 and Smith hits tops for a 13-darter. He has a chance, just a chance, to run away from Van Gerwen here.
“Watching in Germany,” says Liz, “and they periodically have a pop-up next to the score with ‘trebleless visits’. My Googling was…less than helpful. If you have time (whenever, no rush), could you explain what in the world that means?”
It basically means any three-dart turn without a big treble (17, 18, 19, 20 I think). So 20, 20, 19 would be a trebleless visit, as would 20, 20 and treble five.
Smith is the better player right now, though moodswings are a big part of these long finals. Van Gerwen has the darts in set eight. It’s not quite a must-win, but it’s not far off.
SMITH WINS THE SEVENTH SET!
Smith 4-3 Van Gerwen (legs 3-2) Smith misses D12 and D6 for the set, but Van Gerwen is on 181 so he’ll get three more. He does it with the second dart, and he’s come from 2-0 down to win the set! Van Gerwen is rattled here.
Updated
SMITH BREAKS BACK!
Smith 3-3 Van Gerwen (legs 2-2) It’s getting edgy now. Van Gerwen starts with a 5 and 1 before partially redeeming it with a treble 20. Smith starts with yet another 180, and all of a sudden he’s favourite for the leg and therefore the set.
Smith is on 130 after nine, with Van Gerwen hitting a 180 to leave 78 after 12. But Smith takes out a sensational 130, hitting the double five almost nonchalantly, and MvG is so discombobulated that he thinks he’s lost the set rather than the leg. He started to put his darts away, thinking they were going off for a break. “His head is in a shed!” says Mar-dell.
Here we go with another huge fifth leg.
THAT IS OUTRAGEOUS! 🤩💥
— PDC Darts (@OfficialPDC) January 3, 2023
OH. MY. WORD.
That set seemed done and dusted but a huge 130 finish takes it to a deciding leg and Smith has the darts!#WCDarts | Final
📺 https://t.co/37DNuuK5Me pic.twitter.com/jNoc4bvjFb
Updated
Smith 3-3 Van Gerwen (legs 1-2) Van Gerwen has another chance on the Smith throw, leaving 96 after 12. Smith can’t take the 170 – but Van Gerwen misses D18 and then D9! Smith goes straight for D15 and hits it without fuss.
Smith 3-3 Van Gerwen (legs 0-2) This is the most glorious sport, with such subtle momentum shifts and complex psychology. Van Gerwen was also over the show a leg and a half ago; now he has taken out 80 in two darts for a 14-darter.
VAN GERWEN BREAKS
Smith 3-3 Van Gerwen (legs 0-1) “This is worrying for Michael Van Gerwen,” says Wayne Mardle as MvG continues to struggle with his grouping. And this his next two visits are 140 and 180, which buys him a shot at 63 for a break. He takes it, last dart in hand on D12. Yet another massive break in this glorious ding-dong.
SMITH WINS THE SIXTH SET TO LEVEL THE MATCH!
Smith 3-3 Van Gerwen (legs 3-1) A dodgy leg for Van Gerwen – “his grouping’s gone,” says Wayne Mardle on Sky – allows Smith to level the match on D10, last dart in hand with MvG on 95.
That’s twice that Smith has broken straight back after losing a set on his own throw.
Updated
SMITH BREAKS AGAIN!
Smith 2-3 Van Gerwen (legs 2-1) Smith leaves 40 after 12 on the Van Gerwen throw – and he gets a look when Van Gerwen misses two at D10. Smith misses two but takes out D5, last dart in hand, and now he’s throwing for the set. This is immense.
Updated
VAN GERWEN BREAKS BACK!
Smith 2-3 Van Gerwen (legs 1-1) Van Gerwen breaks back straight away with a 12-darter. He hits his ninth 180, follows up with a 134 to leave 66 after nine, and the rest is a formality.
SMITH BREAKS!
Smith 2-3 Van Gerwen (legs 1-0) Three of the five sets have been won against the darts, so there’s no reason for Smith to panic. Especially as he’s left 121 after nine to break the throw. Van Gerwen isn’t on a finish to Smith is able to leave 50, and he cleans it up with the minimum of fuss. That’s a superb response to the disappointment of losing the fifth set.
Match averages Smith 104.89 – 105.42 Van Gerwen
Updated
VAN GERWEN BREAKS TO WIN THE FIFTH SET
Smith 2-3 Van Gerwen (legs 2-3) A dreadful leg for Smith at the worst possible time. He’s not on a finish after 12 darts, and Van Gerwen leaves himself on 59.
Smith hits 80 to leave 95. Doesn’t matter: Van Gerwen cleans up in two for a huge break.
Updated
Smith 2-2 Van Gerwen (legs 2-2) Another 180 for MvG, his eighth to go with 12 for Smith. He follows it with a 168 to leave 32 after nine darts. This is utter filth, and he takes it out for a majestic 10-darter.
Big leg coming up.
Smith 2-2 Van Gerwen (legs 2-1) The standard is preposterous. Smith leaves 40 after 12 on his throw, and he takes it out for another 13-darter. “Van Gerwen is being outscored,” says Wayne Mardle on commentary. “I can’t believe I’m saying that.”
Smith 2-2 Van Gerwen (legs 1-1) MvG is pretty much matching his tournament average of 105; Smith is eight points above his, with a match average of 107. At the moment, MvG is… if not hanging on, then certainly under relentless pressure. He takes out D10, last dart in hand, to finish 100 with Smith waiting on 56.
Smith 2-2 Van Gerwen (legs 1-0) Smith hits his 12th 180, so van Gerwen pops in another to put Smith under pressure on tops. He takes it with the second dart to go ahead again.
Ready for more? I’ll say.
VAN GERWEN WINS THE FOURTH SET
Smith 2-2 Van Gerwen (legs 0-3) Not the best leg from either player, but MvG takes out 83 to win the set to love. That’s a seriously impressive response because Smith was running riot.
VAN GERWEN BREAKS!
Smith 2-1 Van Gerwen (legs 0-2) MvG hits a maximum; Smith sees that and hits back-to-back 180s before missing two at double for a 12-dart hold. Van Gerwen takes out 90 in style: 18, D18, D18. This is spectacular stuff.
DOUBLE DOUBLE! 🔥
— PDC Darts (@OfficialPDC) January 3, 2023
Sensational response from Van Gerwen, who defies two 180s in the leg from Smith to complete a stunning 90 finish with two D18s!
This is darts from another planet! 💥 pic.twitter.com/eLVwFURwzu
Updated
Smith 2-1 Van Gerwen (legs 0-1) MvG is 22 per cent on the doubles, though that does include a cluster in a leg he eventually won. Even so, it’s partially a consequence of the pressure being applied by Smith’s scoring. Van Gerwen misses another before taking out D4 to win in 16 darts (I think).
SMITH WINS THE THIRD SET!
Smith 2-1 Van Gerwen (legs 3-1) Darts is hard enough to live blog at the best of times, but with these two it’s impossible. Smith wires the bull for a set-clinching 170 – but MvG misses tops and Smith takes advantage. That’s six legs in seven for Smith; this is a humdinger.
VAN GERWEN BREAKS BACK!
Smith 1-1 Van Gerwen (legs 2-1) The standard is obscene, or at least the scoring. The doubling is slightly more hit and miss. Van Gerwen hits 180 to leave 36 after 12, but he misses all three at D18. Smith also misses three for the set and Van Gerwen cleans up.
SMITH BREAKS!
Smith 1-1 Van Gerwen (legs 2-0) Smith is rampant here. He hits another 180 and leaves 80 after 12. Van Gerwen misses the bull for 130, and Smith takes care of business with the cleanest of two-dart finishes. He’s won the last five legs.
Updated
Smith 1-1 Van Gerwen (legs 1-0) Smith is in and amongst straight after the break, hitting another 180 on his second visit. Both men miss a dart for the leg, the bull in Van Gerwen’s case, and Smith takes out tops for a 16-darter.
It’s only the second nine-darter in a World Championship final – Adrian Lewis did it in his win over Gary Anderson in 2011.
Our old friend Scott Murray timed that glorious 18-dart leg: one minute, one second. Astonishing stuff. “61 seconds to make history,” writes Scott. “Sid Waddell was right when he said darts was quicker than grand prix!”
Updated
The match averages are a peedie bit higher now: Smith 111.5, MvG 108.61. Lord knows what the set averages were; they must both have been in excess of 120.
SMITH TAKES THE SECOND SET!
Smith 1-1 Van Gerwen (legs 3-1) This is stunning stuff. Smith misses the bull for a 130 and a 12-daerter, with Van Gerwen waiting on 84 for a break. MvG hits T20 but then misses two more at D12. Smith calmly takes out D10 to win the set and level the match. More of this please!
THE BEST LEG OF DARTS IN HISTORY!!!!
SMITH BREAKS WITH A NINE-DARTER!
Smith 0-1 Van Gerwen (legs 2-1) THEY’RE BOTH ON A NINE-DARTER AFTER SIX DARTS! I can’t keep up with this, it’s ridiculous. MvG misses D12 for a nine – and then Smith takes out T20, T19 and finally, gloriously, D12. What a leg! What a sport! What a pair of geniuses!
THIS IS INSANE!!! WHAT A LEG OF DARTS!!
— Sky Sports Darts (@SkySportsDarts) January 3, 2023
MICHAEL SMITH HITS A NINE DARTER!! 🤯😲 pic.twitter.com/T6HWmRCQYX
Updated
Smith 0-1 Van Gerwen (legs 1-1) Another 180 for Smith, his fourth of the match, and he holds with a lovely 11-darter.
Smith 0-1 Van Gerwen (legs 0-1) Smith starts with a 180 on the Van Gerwen throw, and he’s ahead after nine darts: MvG 186, Smith 131. He can’t hit two tops to break in 12 darts, and Van Gerwen takes out 90, last dart in hand, on D18. Right thing, right moment.
Updated
The players are back on the oche, and Van Gerwen has the throw in set two.
Smith was 4-0 down to Van Gerwen in the 2019 final; he just cannot afford another slow start tonight. He didn’t play badly in that set, averaging 97.64 to MvG’s 99.36, but the miss on D16 in the third leg was costly.
VAN GERWEN WINS THE FIRST SET!
Smith 0-1 Van Gerwen (legs 1-3) MvG finishes the job, hitting D8 for a 15-darter to win the first set against the darts. That’s an appreciable statement of intent. Smith hasn’t played badly, but MvG has, yep, done the right things at the right moments.
Van Gerwen breaks!
Smith 0-0 Van Gerwen (legs 1-2) The scoring has been superb so far. Van Gerwen and Smith exchange 180s, and Van Gerwen leaves 47 after nine. Smith wires D16 for a 127 – and Van Gerwen hits the same double for a thrilling 11-dart break.
Updated
Smith 0-0 Van Gerwen (legs 1-1) Now Smith lands his first 180, immediately putting Van Gerwen under pressure at the stat of the second leg. MvG is up to it, hitting 168 to leave D10 after 12 darts – but then it descends into a minor shambles of missed doubles from van Gerwen, with the crowd jeering like eejits. Smith can’t take advantage and eventually MvG takes out D1 to win in 21 darts.
Smith 0-0 Van Gerwen (legs 1-0) Smith starts with a ton, MvG with 85, then Van Gerwen’s second visit brings the first 180 of the match (spoiler: it won’t be the last). But Smith keeps cool to leave tops after 12 darts, and he nails it with the 13th. A superb start for Smith.
Updated
Michael Smith will throw first. Game on!
It sounds like Michael Smith is the crowd’s favourite tonight, for the first leg at least.
And now it’s time for Seven Nation Army, aka Michael van Gerwen. He bounces onto the oche and greets Smith with a quiet warmth. You suspect an in-form Van Gerwen holds many opponents in contempt; Michael Smith is not one of them.
“Moment of the tournament has to be Dirk van Duijvenbode’s win over Ross Smith, a right old tear up,” says Gregory Phillips. “DVD is so fun to watch, even though MVG was always going to obliterate him.
“Smith is the only one who can score heavily enough across multiple sets to have the slightest chance of staying with MVG, but if he loses the first two sets, he’s toast.”
They just pencil in Ross Smith v Dirk for the last 16 every year.
The players are ready. First up to the oche is Michael Smith, smiling a little nervously as he strolls on to the sound of Shut Up and Dance With Me.
The Sky pundits – Wayne Mar-dell, Mark Webster and John Part – have all predicted MvG to win either 7-3 or 7-4. I’m predicting nothing, except that they will be a series of exquisitely tense fifth legs.
Michael van Gerwen’s route to the final
L64: Lewy Williams 3-0
L32: Mensur Suljovic 4-2
L16: Dirk van Duijvenbode 4-1
QF: Chris Dobey 5-0
SF: Dimitri Van den Bergh 6-0
Michael Smith’s route to the final
L64: Nathan Rafferty 3-0
L32: Martin Schindler 4-3
L16: Joe Cullen 4-1
QF: Stephen Bunting 5-3
SF: Gabriel Clemens 6-2
“At least we got the right final,” says J.R. in Illinois. “It doesn’t completely make up for an underwhelming tournament but hopefully it’ll be a barn burner. Also, if you needed another reason why that 180 comparison is meaningless, Smith has played 29 more legs than MVG so Smith is averaging a 180 in 34.6% of his legs and MVG is averaging a 180 in 33.7%.
“Hard to argue with Mensur’s 161 as best moment of the tournament. I’d put David Cameron’s insane comeback against Richie Edhouse as the underrated match of the tournament. Worst moment of the tournament was when Dimitri Van den Bergh grabbed the mic from Michael Bridge. Ugh. Not a Dimi fan.”
Yes, overall it hasn’t been the greatest worlds, certainly nowhere near as good as last year’s. The last 16 was terrific but there haven’t been enough high-class and/or dramatic games since then.
That said, there have been great moments and stories – Mensur’s 161, Gerwyn Price’s ear defenders (am I the only person who hadn’t heard that phrase until this week?), Jose de Sousa’s comebacks, Gabriel Clemens, Scott Wiliams, Jim Williams. And there is a different kind of pleasure in watching an all-time great reassert himself as Van Gerwen has done, and seeing a natural talent like Smith learn the art of winning ugly. Whoever wins, it’ll be a brilliant story.
What’s your favourite moment of the tournament?
Mine has to be Mensur’s 161, a laughably brilliant finish made even funnier by the infectiously giddy commentary of Wayne Mardle and John Part. It’s instant serotonin.
INSANITY FROM SULJOVIC!!!!! 🤯
— PDC Darts (@OfficialPDC) December 28, 2022
Michael van Gerwen declines a dart at the bullseye and Mensur takes out 161 to clinch the set!
Just look at Van Gerwen's face 😂
Breathtaking!#WCDarts | R3
📺 https://t.co/37DNuuK5Me pic.twitter.com/60M4sqX3ZX
On-the-nose pre-match music
Tournament stats
Van Gerwen is ahead, but it’s interesting that Smith has still scored more 180s. I suppose MvG’s tally should really include 171-177s given how often he switches.
Tale of the Tape 📏
— PDC Darts (@OfficialPDC) January 3, 2023
🏴 Michael Smith vs Michael van Gerwen 🇳🇱
Here's the key stats of our two finalists ahead of tonight's final. 🏆 pic.twitter.com/FdoaRJ1HEC
Last night’s action
Preamble
Predictable doesn’t have to mean boring. Before the World Championship, the most fancied final – by some distance – was this meeting of the two Michaels. It was also among the most mouthwatering: two big scorers who play at dizzying speed, and who, for very different reasons, are aching to get their clammy palms on the Sid Waddell Trophy.
That’s a slightly odd thing to say about Van Gerwen, given he has already won it three times, most recently when beating Smith 7-3 in 2019. But Van Gerwen was slowly on his way down from the astonishing peak of 2016, and his surprise defeat to Peter Wright in the following year’s final was followed by a bewildering, at times shocking loss of form. His last two appearances at the worlds were disastrous: he was humiliated 5-0 by Dave Chisnall in 2020 – “I played crap” was his succinct post-match analysis – and had to withdraw during last year’s tournament when he caught Covid.
For two years he had to cope with the unique torment that occurs when a serial winner stops winning, but he slowly rediscovered himself during 2022. A cathartic Premier League victory was followed by wins at the Matchplay, the Grand Prix and the Players Championship Finals.
At this worlds he has played preposterously well, almost on a par with his performance in the 2016-17 tournament – and that was the greatest darts ever played. In the last fortnight he has dropped only three sets, and the aura that faded away in the aftermath of that 2017 victory has returned big-time.
But if anyone can live with Van Gerwen’s savage scoring, and put him under maximum pressure on the doubles, it’s Smith. He hasn’t been at his best in this tournament, and could easily have lost to Martin Schindler or Stephen Bunting. But in a way that represents progress.
For years, the concepts of ‘Michael Smith’ and ‘winning ugly’ were mutually exclusive. He infamously lost eight major finals in a row, including two at the worlds, before finally winning his first at the Grand Slam in November. Smith has started winning games that he should have lost, rather than the other way round, including Schindler at the worlds and Joe Cullen in an immense quarter-final at the Grand Slam.
Not even Van Gerwen hits 180s with the same frequency or effortless elegance as Smith, and that beautifully repeatable throw – plus the Tigger that lurks beneath his sometimes diffident exterior – has enabled him to keep bouncing back from crushing disappointments. He will be world champion one day. “If I did win it,” he said after last night’s semi-final victory over Gabriel Clemens, “I’d feel sorry for my liver.”
When Smith does become world champion, someone will be able to write a helluva book about his journey story in the competition. There’s the astounding win over Phil Taylor in 2013-14, when Smith was a 14-1 outsider in a two-horse race; the quarter-final collapse against Barney two years later; the head-punching defeat in a marvellous game against the eventual winner Rob Cross in 2017-18; the desperate defeats to Luke Woodhouse and Jason Lowe. And there’s last year’s final, when Peter Wright went into overdrive to shatter the sense of destiny that Smith had built up during epic wins over Jonny Clayton and Gerwyn Price.
There is huge respect between these two, game recognising game and all that, and last night Van Gerwen sidled up to Smith in the practice room and told him that they owed it to the public to ensure they met in the final. They have both been very clear throughout the tournament that want to beat the best. Smith also wants revenge for 2019, when Van Gerwen taught him a lesson in hitting clutch doubles. Both players are better now than they were then, Smith in particular, so this could – could – be a classic.
As if the match wasn’t exciting enough, the winner will replace Price as world No1: Van Gerwen for the first time since the final two years ago; Smith for the first time in his life.
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