The 2020 Unibet European Championship begins in Oberhausen, Germany on Thursday with 32 of the world’s top stars in action.

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The top 32 players on the 2020 European Tour Order of Merit will compete for £500,000 across four days from October 29-November 1 at the König Pilsener Arena in the latest PDC event being staged with fans.Thursday’s bumper opening day of action will see all 16 first round ties played, as reigning champion Rob Cross begins his title defence against Dutch debutant Martijn Kleermaker.

“To win this tournament last year was a fantastic achievement,” said Cross. “I’d won the World Matchplay a couple of months before so I was riding that high.”Things haven’t really gone to plan for me this year so far but we’re getting to the point where there’s tournaments coming thick and fast.”I hope I can perform well this weekend in front of the amazing German fans and I can use it as a platform to build on and hopefully get back to my best.”

Cross defeated Gerwyn Price in last year’s final, with the Welshman hoping to go one better this time around after claiming two televised titles in the past five weeks.Now up to second in the world, Price is among the outright tournament favourites with Unibet ahead of his round one meeting with 2012 European Championship semi-finalist Kim Huybrechts.

“Last year it was really disappointing to lose the final the way I did,” Price conceded.”For whatever reason I just couldn’t get anything going but that disappointment will drive me on to do even better this year.”My confidence is high at the moment, I feel like I’m in a good position to win some more TV titles and build my form up ahead of the World Championship.”

Michael van Gerwen is the joint-most successful player in the tournament’s history along with Phil Taylor, having picked up the title four times.However, the most recent successes came as he landed a fourth straight title in 2017, a record the Dutchman is keen to put right as he tries to recapture his best form.”I love this tournament because it is the climax of the European Tour,” said Van Gerwen, the 3/1 tournament favourite with Unibet who will meet Darius Labanauskas in his opener.

“Normally we play a lot more than four European Tours and I have been successful on them so I feel this is a tournament I have a good chance of success in.”This year things have been a bit different only playing four European Tours but I’m still high in the seedings.”I feel good, I’m feeling confident that I will perform and I can get back to winning trophies again.”

Joe Cullen is the number one seed having won last weekend’s International Darts Open to top the 2020 European Tour Order of Merit.Cullen will take on William O’Connor, while fellow 2020 European Tour event winners Jose De Sousa and Devon Petersen will play Jeffrey de Zwaan and Andy Hamilton respectively.World Champion Peter Wright faces German number two Gabriel Clemens and 2016 runner-up Mensur Suljovic will meet two-time semi-finalist Daryl Gurney.

Thursday’s winners will return to the stage on Friday as the second round takes place across two sessions.
Saturday will see the quarter-finals played in the evening, before the semi-finals and final take place on Sunday night.The European Championship will be broadcast on ITV4 in the UK, through the PDC’s international broadcast partners including RTL7 and DAZN, through PDCTV for Rest of the World Subscribers and via matchroom.live.

Tickets for the Unibet European Championship are available through PDC Europe.

As you’ll have noticed from my overall staking plan, I’m siding predominantly with Dave Chisnall to come through this section and go on and reach the final.

He may have suffered a mini hangover in the two European Tour events that have come since his agonising semi-final defeat to Gerwyn Price in the World Grand Prix but he’ll be raring to go for another crack at a maiden TV title.

Those three missed match darts in a deciding leg with Price only came after he’d staged a superb fightback of his own from 3-1 down in sets so there are plenty of positives to take from an otherwise encouraging week which came a bit out of the blue having struggled for form in the previous weeks.

Obviously there are no easy games for anyone but this section is relatively light and although he lost to top seed Joe Cullen at last weekend’s International Darts Open, he did overcome the Rockstar during his World Grand Prix run.

Maik Kuivenhoven is available at 33/1 to come through this quarter with some bookies and while this is only his second ever major – having made his debut at the UK Open – he is the only player in the field to boast a 100% record over MVG this year!

Sure, that is only from two matches, but far more importantly he reached the quarter-finals of the recent European Darts Grand Prix, losing 6-4 to Ian White after beating Glen Durrant and Daryl Gurney, so don’t be surprised if he stuns Aspinall in a short format on Thursday.

If he gets through that, this is the kind of section where a minnow could find a way through at a big price – but just keep those stakes low on this one!
Quarter Two

(4) Devon Petersen v (29) Andy Hamilton
(13) Rob Cross v (20) Martijn Kleermaker
(5) Michael van Gerwen v (28) Darius Labanauskas
(12) Mervyn King v (21) Ian White

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