Excalibur Continues Magical Run with Win in Boomerang Tours Fiesta

The 5th Event of the Championship Darts Corporation’s 2022 campaign, the Boomerang Tours Fiesta, featured a marquee final between two of North America’s biggest stars, both of whom have enjoyed major recent successes. Canada’s David Cameron won the World Seniors Darts Masters in May, and American Leonard Gates won the North American championship in New York earlier this month. On this day, it was David Cameron who emerged victorious with a 7-3 victory, averaging 97.1 over the ten legs.

“Soldier” Gates’ had the more difficult trip to the finals, having to get through Kevin Luke (5-4), Steve Warnock (6-4), and Gary Mawson (6-3) to reach the semis where his run almost ended against Event 4 winner, Jake Taylor. Taylor led 6-5 and had match darts to win, but Gates punished those misses, winning the last two legs on the spin to take the match 7-6.

Cameron’s run was more straightforward, with comfortable wins against David Fatum, Ryan Vander Weit, and James Solek, to reach the semifinals. He did have a hard fought, back and forth matchup vs Keith Way at that stage, eking out a 7-5 victory to book his place in the final.

Leonard Gates produced the highest average on the day, despite the loss in the finals, shooting a 92.9 over 51 legs. He was one of six players to average in the 90s on the day. David Cameron’s finishing was excellent all day, converting 46% of his checkouts. Jake Taylor’s run to the semifinals included an event high twelve 180s.

Article by Brian Fraser

June 25, 2022

“The Truth” Reigns in Cambridge

Canadian sharpshooter, Jake “The Truth” Taylor erased a 5-3 deficit and survived a match dart to defeat “The Gambler”, Danny Baggish, 7-6 in the final of Event #4 on the 2022 Championship Darts Circuit in Cambridge, Ontario on Saturday afternoon. With an event average of 83.03, the ‘Cosmo Classic’ (presented by the CDC’s longest-running partner, Cosmo Darts) saw top-quality darts and big finishes throughout from the Tour Card holders in attendance.

The eventual champion began his day with a convincing 5-1 victory over first year cardholder, Michael Nguyen, in the round of 32 before running into a tough test in Canadian Jim Long in the final 16. 5th-seeded Long opened up a seemingly insurmountable 5-1 lead but never managed an opportunity at a match dart as Taylor found his groove and poured on the pressure to win the final 5 legs and seal the victory. The Newfoundland man followed up that shocker with a convincing 6-1 victory over the event’s 4-seed (and newly-minted North American champion), Leonard Gates before seeing off Steve Warnock 7-3 in the semifinals.

Baggish, who was runner-up to Gates in the North American Championship at the Hulu Theater at Madison Square Garden earlier this month, opened his run to the finals against his World Cup of Darts teammate, Jules Van Dongen, whom he dispatched 5-1 with a strong performance. He then took care of the 2021 CDC top Canadian, John Norman Jr, with a 6-1 victory and a 104.06 average. He would go on to defeat Cashmere Ventura 6-4 and then Shaun Narain 7-1 in the semifinals.

PDC Tour Card Holder, Baggish, led the event with a 92.31 average on the day and had the most 180s with ten. Jake Taylor finished second in both categories with an 89.36 average and eight 180s. Jim Long and Jason Watt each finished with a 44% checkout success rate to top the table.

The round-of-32 was NOT kind to the seeded players on the day, with top stars like Matt Campbell, Danny Lauby Jr, Chuck Puleo, Gary Mawson and the Seniors Matchplay champion, David Cameron, all falling before the last-16. They’ll be looking to rebound later on Saturday Event #5 – The Boomerang Tours Fiesta – begins at 4:00 Eastern. Points earned across all 12 Tour events will determine the American and Canadian representatives at the Cazoo World Darts Championship in London, England, in December.

“The Gambler” Goes All-in to Claim Event Three Title

CDC Event 3 concluded a brilliant weekend in Indianapolis with Danny Baggish sealing a 7-5 victory over Leonard Gates in the Final.

Leonard “Soldier” Gates, playing in his second consecutive final, won his five matches in the run-up by beating Tanner Picard, Bob Miske, Steve Warnock, Robbie Phillips, and John Norman Jr in the SemiFinal.  Leonard collected six 180s and thirty-one 140s in his first five games.

For his part, Danny “The Gambler” Baggish prevailed over Ross Snook, Matt Smooke, David Fatum, Kevin Luke, and Chuck Puleo in his SemiFinal. Danny’s route to the Final saw him collect nine 180s and twenty-five 140s.

David Cameron claimed the highest First Round winning average of 92.06 in a 5-2 victory over American Stowe Buntz, which featured a 161 checkout by the Canadian. Cameron went one better in the second round by checking out 170 in a 5-3 loss to Michael Esquibel.

David Fatum, who made his return to the Tour this weekend after a two-year hiatus, acquitted himself well by beating Jim Widmayer in the first round and Event 1 Champion Matt Campbell in the second.  “The Scorpion” trusted his 19 shooting in the last leg decider against the Ninja, throwing 133, 95, 133 in consecutive visits and finishing 40 to conclude a 17-dart break against the PDC player. But the Arizona ace ran into the Baggish buzzsaw in round 3, being on the receiving end of a 96.5 average from the Florida phenom.

Joey Lynaugh continued to make serious waves on the CDC Tour by reaching the Quarterfinal on Sunday, following his last-16 finish in Event One and semifinal loss in Event Two. The youngster collected the scalps of Jason Brandon, Joe Cheney and Ryan Vander Weit before succumbing to John Norman Junior in the quarters.

The Gates/Baggish Final saw the two hottest players of the day face off.  Before the last game of the day, Baggish’s First 9 Darts Average of 101.16 was topped only by Gates’ 101.80.   Baggish was able to keep that standard through the final, while Gates served up a mere First 9 of 93.  Danny gained control of the match by taking the second leg on Leonard’s throw.   He made it 3-0 with a 15-dart hold before Soldier took a leg with a cool 16-darter on his own throw.  The game continued high quality, with each player trading holds in 6 visits or less, aside from a couple of legs in the middle when Baggish experienced some setup/finishing problems and Soldier was able to take them both.  In the end, The Gambler was able to right the ship and won the last two legs to clinch a 7-5 victory.

The races for the Continental Cup and World Championship berths are well and truly on!

Leonard Gates and Chuck Puleo pose after the final

Gates Claims 6th CDC Title in Indy Nightcap

On Saturday, for the first time since the inception of the Championship Darts Circuit, there were two Main Events staged in one day. Main Event #2 – The Indianapolis 501 – saw two five-time CDC champions, Leonard Gates and Chuck Puleo, square off in another highly-charged Final. When the dust settled, it was Gates who would be hoisting the trophy for the sixth time after a 7-5 victory.

With darts in the air slightly later than anticipated, the First round saw five 5-0 whitewashes, courtesy of Doug Boehm, John Norman Jr, John Steinhofer, Jim Long and Jason Brandon. In other action, Alex Spellman averaged over 100 in a 5-2 defeat of past CDC Champion, Kevin Luke. Evolution Tour star Joey Lynaugh showed his stuff in a tough battle with Larry Butler, averaging over 90 and edging The Eagle in a last leg decider.

As the event progressed to the second round, Canada’s Steve Warnock cruised home in a true “statement win,” shocking the room with a 5-0 shellacking of event #1 champion, Matt Campbell.   Warnock won the first three legs in 18, 12 and 16 darts, which proved to be too big a hill for his fellow Canadian to climb. In other action, Danny Baggish – fresh off his runner-up performance – rained on Alex Spellman’s parade with a tight 5-4 victory that included a “Big Fish” 170 checkout in the seventh leg.

The Last 16 saw plenty of fireworks, with 5 of the 8 victors averaging over 90 as the format stretched to best of 11. Leonard “Soldier” Gates came out flying, winning each of the first three legs in 13 darts to put his opponent, New York’s Ryan Vander Weit in an early hole. Despite quality darts from Vander Weit – who threw three 180s in the match, finished a 126 and averaged 99— Gates and his nine 140s were not to be denied as he took the match 6-3.

In the quarterfinals, Joey Lynaugh continued to show the form that had people talking on last week’s PDC Development Tour, closing the door on Danny Baggish’s hopes of a return trip to the final with a clutch 15-darter in a last leg decider and averaging almost 94 for the match. In another sudden-death thriller that pitted two PDC World Championship qualifiers against one another, John Norman Jr took out Danny Lauby with an 18-dart hold of throw in a match that saw each player break the other twice.

In the semis, Chuck Puleo derailed Lynaugh’s bid for darting glory 7-3 to book his place in the final. The other semifinal match was much more tense, with Gates in a true dogfight with John Norman. The match went the distance as both players poured-in the trebles. Over the 13 legs, Gates had 35 trips to the oche with scores over 100 while Norman managed 26. The final leg started strong, with both players on a finish after 9 darts before the nerves set in a bit. Both players failed to find a treble in the subsequent round and Norman then missed D-16 for the match , opening the door for Gates to pin tops for the win.

The final gave dart fans everything they could ask for with both players averaging well North of 95. Puleo banged-in four 180s to Gates’ two but Gates had the 11-8 advantage in turns of 140+.  After Chuck sank a 122 finish for a 12-dart hold in leg three, the Texan answered with a 13-darter of his own in the fourth and then managed a crucial break of throw in the fifth – pinning 28 with his 14th dart to strand the Arizona man on 45 and claim the only break of the match on his way to the 7-5 victory.

Matt Campbell with Trophy

Campbell Out Of This World in Galaxy Grand Prix

Championship Darts Corporation kicked-off the 2022 season Saturday in Indianapolis, Indiana. With COVID restrictions a thing of the past, Americans and Canadians did battle face-to face for the first time since 2019 on a combined Tour as designed. 14 Canadians made the trip across the border to join 49 Americans for the Galaxy Grand Prix – sponsored by Galaxy Barrel Design – with the “Ginga Ninja,” Matt Campbell, taking the title over fellow Tour Card holder, Danny Baggish.

Canadian Jim Long posted the highest First Round average of 95.23 with a 5-1 victory over John Steinhofer in a best of 9 format. Darin “Big Daddy” Young landed the first 180 of the tournament almost immediately in the first leg of his matchup with Louis Vessels.

Doug Boehm triumphed 5-3 over Shawn Brenneman in what was arguably the most nailbiting first-rounder, with 5 breaks of throw between the two.  Boehm grabbed control of the match in the 5th leg with a 13-darter, followed by a 12-darter in leg 6, seeing out the next two legs despite Brenneman hitting his first 180 in leg 7.

Newly-minted US Darts Masters qualifiers, Danny Lauby Jr and Doug Boehm, fell in the second round to Jeff Springer and Joey Lynaugh, respectively.  Fellow US Masters player David Cameron tossed a 93.66 average to glide into the Last 16 with a win over Jason Brandon.

The Last 16 saw an even split of 8 Canadians and 8 Americans vying for spots in the Quarterfinals.

American Jeff Springer continued his run against 3-Time World Champion John Part, despite Darth Maple executing a beautiful 11-dart break of throw in the third leg. Springer stole the darts in the fourth leg and checked out 105 in the fifth to keep the advantage.   The two traded holds until the end, where Springer came out on top, 6-3.

In other notable last-16 matches, Canadian John Norman Jr bowed out 6-4 to a charging Alex Spellman in a match that saw no leg go more than 19 darts, Larry “The Eagle” Butler fell to New Brunswick’s Keith Way 6-4 and “Captain America,” Jim Widmayer, saw-off Canada’s Kiley Edmunds 6-1 with a 93.51 average.

The Quarterfinal Round saw Jeff Springer in continued top form in defeating Alex Spellman 6-3, logging a 158 checkout along the way and sealing the match with an 11-darter. Meanwhile, Danny Baggish ended Widmayer’s bid for glory with a 6-1 win and Newfoundland phenom, Jacob Taylor, ground out a victory over Chuck Puleo, despite averaging under 80 and managing only one 180 in ten legs.

The Semifinal lineup guaranteed that both countries would be represented in the final, with Baggish going up against Springer and a Taylor-Campbell matchup in the other half of the draw.

Taylor shook-off his subpar performance with eleven 140s and averaging almost 94, but it wasn’t enough to put away Campbell, who claimed the 7-5 victory with steady play and a 14-dart break of throw to advance to his finals tie with Danny Baggish.

Baggish started slow in the all-USA semifinal and Springer bounded out to a 2-0 lead before “The Gambler” went all-in with 134, 140, 100 to set up a 14-dart break and get back into the game. After a thrilling 13-dart hold of throw, the two were back on equal terms before Springer hit back with a 17-dart hold of his own to pull ahead once again. However, that would be the last leg the Washington man would win on the day as Baggish took control with successive finishes of 13, 14 and 12 darts and cruised into the final with a 7-3 victory.

The mouthwatering final did indeed live up to its billing and was everything one would expect from two PDC Tour Card holders. Campbell averaged 98.5 and Baggish 96.8 in a tungsten shootout that would have wowed audiences on any stage. The proceedings opened with a 12-dart break-of-throw from Campbell, sealed with a tournament-topping 160 finish (matched only by Gary Mawson in Round 1). Baggish broke back immediately with a 15-darter of his own, and the race was on. Both players were exceptional in cover shots throughout the match, firing-in consistent 134s and 137s.

Campbell would go up 4-1 before Baggish put up clinical 13 and 14-dart finishes to close within one. Following three straight holds of throw, the Florida man failed to finish 85, allowing the Canadian a look at 25 – which he finished off in two for a 13-dart break to seal the 7-4 win and hoist the trophy.

CDC and NAWDA Announce Partnership

Three-Year Agreement Provides Opportunity for Top Women to Join Sport’s Elite in US, Canada

(Chicago, Illinois and Nashville, Tennessee – March 14, 2022) Championship Darts Corporation, owner of the Championship Darts Circuit – North America’s professional darts tour – and the North America Women’s Dart Association, the premier organization showcasing top-level talent in the ladies’ game, today announce the formation of a three-year strategic partnership that will provide two women players the opportunity to join the ranks of professional darts players on the “CDC Tour.”

Beginning in 2022, the winner and runner-up in the NAWDA Championship (to be held in conjunction with the Music City Classic in Nashville in August this year) will receive their CDC Tour Cards for the following calendar year, allowing them to enter the otherwise-closed professional events and play against the continent’s best. Championship Darts Corporation will also sponsor entry fees into two of the CDC Tour events for each player. Further, the two NAWDA-qualified players will be able to take additional sponsorship dollars earned via NAWDA play and apply it to either:
• Assist in covering costs for the following year’s Women’s Series events run by the Professional Darts Corporation (PDC) in Europe; or
• Cover entry fees to the remainder of the CDC Tour events for the year in which their Tour Card is valid (not to exceed 10 additional events, for a total of 12 paid event entries between CDC and NAWDA sponsorship).

“We’re excited to partner with Rita (Wilkinson) and Amy (Fahey) at NAWDA to provide top women players the opportunity to play alongside the best on the continent,” said Peter Citera, CEO of Championship Darts Corporation, “darts is a sport where the biological differences between men and women are largely irrelevant. Look, for example, at the success Fallon Sherrock has enjoyed in the most elite events put on by our partners at the PDC. There is no reason that talented women with the drive and determination to succeed in our game shouldn’t have the opportunity to compete and prove themselves against all comers.”

In addition to providing the Tour Cards and sponsorship, CDC stands ready to advise and assist the NAWDA leadership team on an as-needed basis in event planning and any potential future expansion of the organization.
“Given the talent our women darters possess, I believe they will have no problem competing with the men of the CDC,” said Rita Wilkinson, Administrator of the NAWDA. I’m so excited for NAWDA to partner with the CDC to provide equal opportunities for North American women darters they would not otherwise have. This organization started off being an avenue for women to compete in the PDC World Championship qualifiers in hopes to advance to the Alexandra Palace stage in England. The women will still have that opportunity if they choose but, given the international travel challenges at the moment, providing them an added opportunity stateside is more than we could have hoped for!”