Peter Wright beats Michael Smith in emotional end to PDC World Darts Championship blighted by Covid and crowd trouble
At the end of one of the tightest PDC World Championship finals in recent memory, there were tears all round.
For Peter Wright, whose outlandish mohawk hairstyle and Snakebite moniker bely a quietly emotional man, they were tears of joy: a 7-5 victory resulting in a second world title, two years after becoming the oldest first-time winner aged 49.
For Michael Smith, who must fear never realising his bountiful potential, they were tears of despair. A sixth defeat in as many major finals. It had happened yet again.
“I must have done something terrible in a past life because it’s doing my head in now,” he said, wiping his soaked face. Wright responded by describing his vanquished opponent as “the future of darts”.
It was a touching conclusion to a troubled tournament, blighted by Covid and sullied by offensive crowds - dual concerns that faded away in a fuzz of contrasting emotions late on Monday night at Alexandra Palace.
“I’m gutted for the players that have missed out like Michael [van Gerwen], Chizzy [Dave Chisnall], Vincent [van der Voort] and all the other players who have tested positive [for Covid], but it doesn’t take away from me working hard to get it,” said Wright, whose three-dart average of 98.34 in the final was marginally below Smith’s 99.22.
“It’s not about me. I just love him [Smith] to bits. I feel bad. As soon as he gets a major, he will trounce everybody. He’s going to be a future world champion.”
That the match would go the distance seemed an inevitability. With a near identical tournament average heading into the final, those in the know had been torn in selecting their winner and united only in predicting a tense affair.
The main concern was whether 31-year-old Smith’s frequent afflictions would again surface. Cast as a nearly-man, the odds on him extending his terrible record in major finals plummeted within half an hour of the start, by which point he was already 2-0 down and in possession of just two wholly irrelevant legs to show for his early efforts.
One of those - the second of the match - was truly remarkable for its utter atrocity, Smith finally triumphing in a 28-dart leg after the pair had missed a whopping 21 darts at doubles between them. Unsurprisingly, it was the longest leg of the entire tournament.
A leg of darts you might expect to see down the local pub, but not at Ally Pally!