Michael van Gerwen will take on Dave Chisnall in the World Grand Prix final
Michael van Gerwen will take on Dave Chisnall in the World Grand Prix final

World Grand Prix darts: Michael van Gerwen v Dave Chisnall final predictions, statistics, head-to-heads, betting tips & TV start time


Our guide for the Boylseports World Grand Prix final between Michael van Gerwen and Dave Chisnall includes head-to-head record, tournament stats, predictions, odds and best bets.

MICHAEL VAN GERWEN v DAVE CHISNALL: CLICK HERE FOR LIVE FINAL UPDATES

It's been another dramatic week of double-start darts in Dublin and the climax could be a highly emotional one if Dave Chisnall can end his wait for a first major title by ending a freakishly long winless streak against Michael van Gerwen.

Chizzy, who I might add was tipped by yours truly at 50/1 each-way pre tournament and 6/1 to win his quarter, is still a considerable underdog despite the form he's shown under the bright lights this week, but could this format throw up one closing shock?

Here, you can find a whole host of stats, head-to-head records and my match verdicts, while you can also look back on the tournament results and previous finals.

World Grand Prix: Saturday October 12

Click on the odds for more match markets

  • TV Coverage: Sky Sports (2000 BST)
  • Final: Best of 9 sets, players must start and finish all legs on a double/bullseye

Michael van Gerwen () v Dave Chisnall ()

HEAD-TO-HEAD

  • Overall: 47-9 (2 draws)
  • 2019 Meetings: 4-0 (On TV: 1-0, Masters SF)
  • TV Meetings: 27-1 (2 draws)

TITLE RECORD (Individual events only)

  • PDC Titles this season: 10-3
  • Majors Titles this season: 2-0
  • All TV Titles this season: 4-0
  • Career PDC Titles: 123-16
  • Major PDC Titles: 35-0
  • All Televised PDC titles: 46-0

ROUTES TO THE FINAL

Michael van Gerwen

  • First round: 2-1 Jamie Hughes (2-3, 3-1, 3-1) Average: 84.59
  • Second round: 3-0 Jeffrey De Zwaan (3-0, 3-1, 3-1) Average: 94.79
  • Quarter-finals: 3-1 Mervyn King (3-2, 1-3, 3-1, 3-2) Average: 94.64
  • Semi-finals: 4-0 Chris Dobey (3-1, 3-2, 3-2, 3-0) Average: 91.41

Dave Chisnall

  • First round: 2-1 Gerwyn Price (2-3, 3-0, 3-2): Average: 92.5
  • Second round: 3-0 Stephen Bunting (3-2, 3-1, 3-0) Average: 86.35
  • Quarter-finals: 3-1 Nathan Aspinall (3-2, 3-1, 2-3, 3-1) Average: 90
  • Semi-finals: 4-1 Glen Durrant (3-0, 0-3, 3-2, 3-2, 3-2) Average: 91.17

TOURNAMENT STATS (MVG stats left)

  • Tournament Average: 91.44 - 90.12
  • Best Average: 94.79 (v De Zwaan) - 92.50 (v Price)
  • Tournament 180s: 10 - 18
  • Starting Doubles Missed: 92 in 59 legs - 103 in 64 legs
  • Number of no score opening visits: 19 (6, 6 & 5 & 2) - 19 (6, 4, 2 & 7)
  • Checkout %: 42.86% (39/91) - 44.44% (40/90)
  • High Checkout: 170 - 170
  • Ton+ Checkouts: 6 - 10

MATCH PREVIEW

Have you got the tissues at the ready for Dave Chisnall's date with destiny?!

There won't be a dry eye in my house - and many hundreds of thousands others around world I'm sure - if Chizzy can finally land the maiden major title that we've all been waiting for him to do for years and years and a few more years after that.

In some ways he's the Jimmy White of darts, entertaining the crowds with his style of play and lovable personality but sadly also being known for what he should have achieved. Of course the Whirlwind did win plenty of snooker titles - just not the Crucible crown, but you get the idea.

Nobody at the top of any sport wants the tag of being "best player never to have won a major" and the crowd pleasing St Helens man will be no different.

It won't help with the pressure and nerves that the darting media, pundits and fans - myself included - keep banging on about his wait for an elusive major and those kind of thoughts must have played on his mind before when it comes to the crunch. Not just in his four previous finals but also the five semi-final defeats.

However Chisnall has been breaking down these mental blocks all season which is one of the main reasons I backed him this week at 50/1 each-way, and not only has he picked up three titles in 2019 but one of them was his first on a stage since 2013.

In interviews he's stated how he's mentally in a much better place than during difficult times in his life on and off the oche, and you can definitely see a change in his on stage demeanour this past week.

The old Chizzy could have buckled in the first round when Gerwyn Price somehow found himself in a position to throw for the match despite being outplayed but it was the Iceman who choked rather than the other way round.

When Chisnall missed two match darts against Aspinall and lost the third set in the quarter-finals, he gathered his composure quickly and cruised through the fourth 3-1 to seal his place in the last four.

And when up against three-time BDO world champion Glen Durrant last night, he won three successive sets in deciding legs to move within one victory of a landmark moment in his career.

The format of this double-start major, which he's reached the final in before back in 2013 when Phil Taylor walloped him 6-0, does help out a jittery player in the sense their opponents can quite easily give them a head start by cocking the start of crunch legs.

And as you can see from the stats above, MVG isn't immune from making those mistakes - he's just not been punished enough for them.

Worryingly for Chisnall, his opponent tonight is not only the defending champion, who is seeking his fifth Dublin title, but also the man who beat him in two of his four major finals at the (11-6) and (11-3).

In total they have met 58 times, with MVG winning 47 occasions while there have also been two draws in the Premier League.

Even more ominous is the fact that only one of Chizzy's nine victories over the world champion has come on TV and that was way back at the 2013 World Grand Prix quarter-final, while his last win of any kind game back in February 2016. They have played 26 times since then, with Chisnall's best result being a draw.

Van Gerwen's continued his rampant pursuit of yet another big title with a 4-0 victory over Chris Dobey although Hollywood did spurn crucial doubles to pile on pressure.

The world number one, who has 10 titles to his name this season including the televised Masters, Premier League, Melbourne Masters and New Zealand Masters, is a worthy favourite but he has lost three finals this year on the European Tour stage to Ian White, Mensur Suljovic and Joe Cullen.

I know this is a much bigger scale but perhaps van Gerwen is actually the most suitable player for Chisnall to face if he's to break this duck. There's certainly less pressure than if he was up against an underdog.

And if he does get the job done, he can't say he hasn't beaten the best to do it.

My correct scoreline of 5-3 to Chizzy is 12/1 with Sky Bet but obviously the win price is appealing enough - as is the 12/5 available on the handicaps with a 1.5 set head start.

Score Prediction: 3-5

World Grand Prix: Full Tournament Results

Sunday October 6
First Round (Best of three sets)

  • Chris Dobey 2-0 Ricky Evans (3-1, 3-1)
  • Mervyn King 2-1 Dimitri Van den Bergh (2-3, 3-1, 3-2)
  • Ian White 2-1 Joe Cullen (0-3, 3-2, 3-0)
  • Jeffrey de Zwaan 2-0 Steve Beaton (3-1, 3-0)
  • James Wade 2-1 John Henderson (3-1, 2-3, 3-0)
  • Michael Smith 2-1 Simon Whitlock (1-3, 3-2, 3-2)
  • Michael van Gerwen 2-1 Jamie Hughes (2-3, 3-1, 3-1)
  • Gary Anderson 2-0 Keegan Brown (3-0, 3-2)

CLICK FOR DAY ONE REVIEW AND HIGHLIGHTS

Monday October 7
First Round (Best of three sets)

  • Stephen Bunting 2-0 Jonny Clayton (3-0, 3-2)
  • Vincent van der Voort 0-2 Nathan Aspinall (0-3, 1-3)
  • Adrian Lewis 1-2 Jermaine Wattimena (3-1, 2-3, 0-3)
  • Glen Durrant 2-1 Krzysztof Ratajski (0-3, 3-1, 3-1)
  • Danny Noppert 2-0 Daryl Gurney (3-2, 3-0)
  • Dave Chisnall 2-1 Gerwyn Price (2-3, 3-0, 3-2)
  • Rob Cross 2-1 Mensur Suljovic (3-1, 0-3, 3-1)
  • Peter Wright 2-0 Max Hopp (3-2, 3-1)

CLICK FOR DAY TWO REVIEW AND HIGHLIGHTS

Tuesday October 8
Second Round (Best of five sets)

  • Mervyn King 3-1 James Wade (2-3, 3-2, 3-1, 3-0)
  • Ian White 3-1 Michael Smith (2-3, 3-0, 3-0, 3-2)
  • Michael van Gerwen 3-0 Jeffrey De Zwaan (3-0, 3-1, 3-1)
  • Chris Dobey 3-1 Gary Anderson (2-3, 3-2, 3-0, 3-1)

CLICK FOR DAY THREE REVIEW AND HIGHLIGHTS

Wednesday October 9 (7pm)
TV Coverage: Sky Sports
Second Round (Best of five sets)

  • Danny Noppert 2-3 Nathan Aspinall (3-2, 0-3, 3-1, 1-3, 0-3)
  • Dave Chisnall 3-0 Stephen Bunting (3-2, 3-1, 3-0)
  • Rob Cross 2-3 Glen Durrant (2-3, 3-0, 1-3, 3-2, 0-3)
  • Peter Wright 1-3 Jermaine Wattimena (3-2, 0-3, 2-3, 2-3)

CLICK FOR DAY FOUR REVIEW AND HIGHLIGHTS

Thursday October 10
Quarter-Finals (Best of five sets)

  • Ian White 2-3 Chris Dobey (0-3, 3-1, 3-0, 1-3, 0-3)
  • Dave Chisnall 3-1 Nathan Aspinall (3-2, 3-1, 2-3, 3-1)
  • Michael van Gerwen 3-1 Mervyn King (3-2, 1-3, 3-1, 3-2)
  • Glen Durrant 3-2 Jermaine Wattimena (0-3, 3-0, 3-2, 1-3, 3-1)

CLICK FOR DAY FIVE REVIEW AND HIGHLIGHTS

Friday October 11 (7pm)
TV Coverage: Sky Sports
Semi-Finals (Best of seven sets)

  • Dave Chisnall 4-1 Glen Durrant (3-0, 0-3, 3-2, 3-2, 3-2)
  • Michael van Gerwen 4-0 Chris Dobey (3-1, 3-2, 3-2, 3-0)

CLICK FOR DAY SIX REVIEW AND HIGHLIGHTS

Saturday October 12 (8pm)
Final (Best of nine sets)

  • Michael van Gerwen v Dave Chisnall

World Grand Prix Past Finals

  • Final scores in sets
  • 1998 - Phil Taylor 13-8 Rod Harrington
  • 1999 - Phil Taylor 6-1 Shayne Burgess
  • 2000 - Phil Taylor 6-1 Shayne Burgess
  • 2001 - Alan Warriner 8-2 Roland Scholten
  • 2002 - Phil Taylor 7-3 John Part
  • 2003 - Phil Taylor 7-2 John Part
  • 2004 - Colin Lloyd 7-3 Alan Warriner
  • 2005 - Phil Taylor 7-1 Colin Lloyd
  • 2006 - Phil Taylor 7-4 Terry Jenkins
  • 2007 - James Wade 6-3 Terry Jenkins
  • 2008 - Phil Taylor 6-2 Raymond van Barneveld
  • 2009 - Phil Taylor 6-3 Raymond van Barneveld
  • 2010 - James Wade 6-3 Adrian Lewis
  • 2011 - Phil Taylor 6-3 Brendan Dolan
  • 2012 - Michael van Gerwen 6-4 Mervyn King
  • 2013 - Phil Taylor 6-0 Dave Chisnall
  • 2014 - Michael van Gerwen 5-3 James Wade
  • 2015 -
  • 2016 -
  • 2017: Daryl Gurney 5-4 Simon Whitlock
  • 2018: Michael van Gerwen 5-2 Peter Wright

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