The
Players Championship series is seen as the best 128 players in the world but is that really the case when a huge cluster of players don't turn up and there is mass struggle to fill the spots on offer?
Luke Littler, for instance, has not played all season on the ProTour and is unlikely to, it seems, as he previously mooted that he would only play the tournaments close to his house, aka Wigan. Still, he has not done that either, only turning up to a ProTour
recently to get a gift off Justin Hood.
Issues with big names playing the main events
There is also the issue that leaves the PDC slightly red-faced that they decided to give all the top 16 back door entries into European Tours only for most of them not to bother under the premise that the fans want to see the big names, but during the Premier League in particular, only a smattering turn up. Michael van Gerwen, who plays this week in both
Austria and Hildesheim, is kind of an anomaly to this rule, as he has often said that he wants ranking points, with a
huge drop imminent towards the World Darts Championship, and doesn't care massively about the Premier League.
But others are showing that perhaps change might be needed. Luke Humphries, Gian van Veen, Gerwyn Price, Jonny Clayton, Josh Rock and Stephen Bunting all decided not to play in Hildesheim and apart from Van Veen and Rock won't play in Austria either. Overall 15 players at least have decided before play begins over the last two days not to play. These are also Ryan Searle, Nathan Aspinall, Daryl Gurney, Cameron Menzies, Bradley Brooks, Oskar Lukasiak, Greg Ritchie and Carl Sneyd.
Ryan Joyce didn't play on Monday, but he has on Tuesday. He was also out to start the week. Often, Hildesheim has been blamed for this, with player fields often depleted, which ironically leads to the same names still performing. Chris Dobey and Wessel Nijman have dominated this year, whether Littler, Humphries, Van Gerwen, and others have played or not.
Kevin Doets, winning the title yesterday by defeating Luke Woodhouse, was a first-time winner, but both have been regular latter-stage stars on the tour for a while. Doets, in particular, is part of a new crop of Dutch stars under MVG and Van Veen, including Zonneveld and Wattimena, who have made exponential strides.
Previous words from Clayton and the struggles with Hildesheim
Jonny Clayton famously said at the World Grand Prix that he dodges Hildesheim and doesn't think the tour should go there, and notoriously, it is one of the destinations that poses issues in getting there from certain parts of Europe, including the UK. “You know I didn’t go to Germany for the Pro Tour events in Hildesheim simply because I don’t think we should have them there," he said last year. “But those are the only ones I missed — I try to get to everything else."
But also, there is often the riposte of the amount of Tour Card holders needing to travel to the UK for the vast majority of events so it is very much a conundrum whether it shifts to an easier destination in Germany or Europe as a whole or sticks being an issue.
Even in call-ups, though, it poses a problem, as players very low down on the Challenge Tour were asked to deputise over the past two days after their call-ups were rejected due to not getting to Hildesheim in time seemingly.
Jonny Clayton previously called out the PDC's insistence on going to Hildesheim so much.
With burgeoning nations such as Belgium or even Poland rising in the darting world, could the answer be to go to an easier destination or are darts players shouting into the void? There is also, especially for English players, something that perhaps will lead to a further boycott, including of European Tours, and that is lost luggage and passport queues. A lot of players, including Dobey, Aspinall, and Clayton, have had gripes with the new entry and exit system and have also lost their luggage in some cases.
This, in itself, has led to some mooting that they might boycott further events. Hildesheim has long been a staple on the calendar, but the number of withdrawals this week does pose the big question. Is it time to move the ProTours, or are players being too protected so they don't play events that in years gone by were very much must-play?