WDF World Darts Championship: Belgian double delights Lakeside

Darts World

WDF World Darts Championship: Belgian double delights Lakeside image

Chris Sargeant / WDF

If you had a Belgian flag handy at the Lakeside World Darts Championship last night, you’d have waved it until the stitching tore. First it was François Schweyen entered the arena to produce a match that could be bottled and sold as pure adrenaline. He and Dutch warrior Jeffrey Sparidaans traded body-blows, haymakers, and heartbreak through a five-set epic that had every hallmark of a Lakeside classic.

Sparidaans struck first — a ruthless, leg-less opener that stunned the room. But Schweyen, a man who appears carved from medieval stone, refused to crumble. They danced on the tightrope all the way to the deciding leg of the deciding set. And then Schweyen pinched the win with Sparidaans sat waiting on a double that never came. High drama. High stakes. High voltage

Moments after Schweyen’s epic, Sybren Gijbels dismantled German hopeful Marcus Maier with cold-blooded precision to give the Belgians a terrific double. The first set wobbled. Everything after? A parade.

SUPERMAN'S LAKESIDE SEQUAL

Prepare the trumpets, tighten the cape, and clear a path through Frimley Green — for on this almighty night, Superman himself crash-landed back onto the iconic Lakeside stage and delivered a comeback forged in thunder.

After twenty-two long years away from darts’ most storied theatre, Matt Clark, now 57 and still built of pure tungsten sinew, roared back into the WDF World Championship spotlight with a victory stitched from grit, guile, and the kind of stubborn refusal to die that could shame a comic-book hero.

He dropped the opening set. He misfired early. He looked—whisper it—mortal. But then the cape unfurled. Clark ignited the scoring jets, reeled in the dangerous Japanese master Haruki Muramatsu, and blasted through the gears to post a mighty 85 average, turning what was a knife-fight into a deceptively serene march across the finishing line.

And what reward awaits our returning caped hero? A last-16 showdown with Belgian bruiser Schweyen… assuming Superman can first locate a hotel room that doesn’t eject him into the Surrey night. Don’t ask.

FOLLOW LAKESIDE IN FACTS AND FIGURES: Check out the WDF World Championship on dartsdatabase.co.uk

A DUEL OF TITANS — AND A BELGIAN WHO WOULDN’T BREAK

François Schweyen enters the arena on the back of a match that could be bottled and sold as pure adrenaline. He and Dutch warrior Jeffrey Sparidaans traded body-blows, haymakers, and heartbreak through a five-set epic that had every hallmark of a Lakeside classic.

 

Sparidaans struck first — a ruthless, leg-less opener that stunned the room. But Schweyen, a man who appears carved from medieval stone, refused to crumble. They danced on the tightrope all the way to the deciding leg of the deciding set. And then Schweyen pinched the win with Sparidaans sat waiting on a double that never came. High drama. High stakes. High voltage

 

GERMANY’S MISERY CONTINUES

Poor Daniel Bauerdick never stood a chance. Slovenian powerhouse Benjamin Pratnemer didn’t just beat him — he steamrollered him, flattening the contest in a merciless whitewash.

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LADIES’ NIGHT: SURVIVAL & SUPREMACY

In the Women’s championship, second seed Lorraine Hyde survived thirteen match darts hurled at her by Turkey’s inspired Emine Dursun. Somehow, Hyde escaped and stood victorious in the quarter-finals. Waiting there is Dutch ice-queen Priscilla Steenbergen, who swept past USA’s seventh seed Tracy Feiertag without surrendering control.

 

WEDNESDAY — THE FUTURE OF DARTS MARCHES IN

Tomorrow, the Lakeside spotlight shifts to the new generation. Front and centre: Mitchell “Wee Sox” Lawrie. Joining him are two more destined for greatness in Coventry’s Jenson Walker and the young lady already more decorated than a Christmas tree, Paige Pauling.

Yet Frimley Green isn’t without that blend of experience and star power either. Deta Hedman will be in attendance against Japan’s pocket rocket, Mikuru Suzuki. North American duo David Fatum and Jason Brandon are the two who will be facing the aforementioned young guns in Walker and Lawrie respectively.

 

TUESDAY NIGHT RESULTS

Open Round 2: Benjamin Pratnemer (5) 3-0 Daniel Bauerdick 

Women's Round 2: Lorraine Hyde (2) 2-1 Emine Dursun 

Open Round 2: Francois Schweyen (10) 3-2 Jeffrey Sparidaans 

Open Round 2: Matt Clark (7) 3-1 Haruki Muramatsu 

Women's Round 2: Tracy Feiertag (7) 0-2 Priscilla Steenbergen 

Open Round 2: Marcus Maier 1-3 Sybren Gijbels

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Contributing Writer