A massive £100,000 bonus is up for grabs at the William Hill World Darts Championship if a player makes history and hits two nine-dart finishes at the Alexandra Palace.
There have been a record-breaking 47 perfect legs on the PDC circuit in 2019 - smashing the previous yearly best of 29 in 2015 and 2018 - but the only televised nine-darter was Michael van Gerwen's at the Players Championship Finals.
There had been a record-breaking 46 nine-darters hit on the PDC circuit this year but none on TV....until now.
— Chris Hammer (@ChrisHammer180) November 23, 2019
Step forward Michael van Gerwen with the 22nd perfect leg of his career and sixth on telly...pic.twitter.com/QkHOcFahog
However, on that occasion van Gerwen bemoaned the fact there was no prize fund for such a feat and even suggested he should have "done a Ronnie O'Sullivan" and "gone for the single eight" deliberately as a kind of protest.
Snooker star O'Sullivan famously passed up a clear opportunity for a 147 break at the 2016 Welsh Open due to the paltry £10,000 prize money while at the recent UK Championship he played for the pink having potted 15 reds and 14 blacks previously, which courted more controversy.
Van Gerwen, who has hit 22 perfect legs in his a sensational career including six in front of live TV cameras, will be excited by this challenge thrown down by the PDC and there's no doubt he'll believe it's possible having once managed two nine-darters in one match - albeit in a floor event.
A few weeks after Michael van Gerwen bemoans the lack of a prize for a nine-dart finish, it's announced £100k will be on offer for a player who does it twice at the worlds.
— Chris Hammer (@ChrisHammer180) December 10, 2019
Wouldn't it be typical of MVG to go and do it twice in one match again...pic.twitter.com/V2Z4I4MIVX
MVG also came agonisingly close to doing it in back-to-back legs at the World Championship of 2013 during his semi-final over James Wade.
🤑 So £100,000 is the prize for a player hitting two nine-darters at the World Championship.
— Sporting Life (@SportingLife) December 10, 2019
🙌 A great excuse to remember Michael van Gerwen sending the Ally Pally crowd crazy with 17 perfect darts in a row...
👍 @MvG180 pic.twitter.com/Oi7n5jDZv7
Phil Taylor is the only player who has previously achieved two nine-darters in one televised event, with both coming in the 2010 Premier League final.
🎯🤑 There will be a massive £100,000 prize for any player hitting TWO nine-darters at the World Darts Championship.
— Sporting Life (@SportingLife) December 10, 2019
🙌 The only player who has managed a pair of perfect legs in one TV event is @PhilTaylor...and both came in the same match! pic.twitter.com/8AXs7LKEyn
There have been nine perfect legs in PDC World Championship history although we had to wait until the 2009 World Championship before Dutch legend Raymond van Barneveld ended the drought - and then threw the tournament's second 12 months later.
🎯 As well as winning all this...
— Sporting Life (@SportingLife) November 19, 2018
🏆 PDC World Champion
🏆 Grand Slam of Darts
🏆 Premier League
🏆🏆 2x UK Open
🏆🏆🏆🏆 4x BDO World champion
🙌 Raymond van Barneveld also hit TWO nine-darters on the world championship stage! pic.twitter.com/YPiz5IoOTG
There's been seven more since then but none by Taylor, who missed double 12 to do it in his last ever match during the 2018 final.
Adrian Lewis, like Barney, has achieved perfection in two different World Championships while MVG, Dean Winstanley, Terry Jenkins, Kyle Anderson and Gary Anderson are the other players who have achieved it at Alexandra Palace.
Click here to watch all of those nine-darters in one place
Only twice has a player earned a six-figure sum for perfect legs. Taylor pocketed exactly £100,000 at the 2002 World Matchplay, which dwarfed the total value of the 1002 bottles of Budweiser he won for hitting nine-darters in the 2004 and 2005 UK Opens (501 apiece!), but the most ever awarded was the £102,000 John Lowe received for the first ever televised back in 1984.
🎖️🎯 Congratulations to John Lowe for the MBE he's received for services to darts and to charity.
— Sporting Life (@SportingLife) December 28, 2018
👏 As well as being a three-time world champion and winning many other titles, he also hit the first ever televised nine-darter in 1984!
👍 @jloweprodart pic.twitter.com/x5JqJfrw74
15 YEARS AGO TODAY! Phil Taylor landed the first televised nine-darter in the PDC at the World Matchplay... pic.twitter.com/fEkBIMAk0s
— PDC Darts (@OfficialPDC) August 1, 2017
A massive £100,000 prize is on offer should any player achieve that feat over the next three weeks, with this year's event beginning on Friday December 13 and running through to the final on New Year's Day.
"The standard of top-level darts has continued to soar this year and that's been evident in the record number of nine-darters across the circuit," said PDC Chairman Barry Hearn ahead of the tournament which begins on Friday December 13 and ends on New Year's Day.
"The World Championship is the perfect stage for bringing the best out of players, and this £100,000 bonus for two nine-darters is another huge incentive for a player to make history at Ally Pally."
* Should two or more players break new ground by achieving two nine-dart finishes, the bonus would be shared on a pro-rata basis. For example, if two players were to each hit two nine-darters, at any stage during the event, they would receive £50,000 each. There is no additional bonus or priority given to players achieving three or more nine-darters, or for the order in which nine-darters are hit.