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PDC to expand Women’s Series to 24 events in 2023; Women’s World Matchplay will be staged again

PDC to expand Women's Series to 24 events in 2023; Women's World Matchplay will be staged again

Prize money of 145,000 on offer during expanded Women’s Series in 2023; Women’s World Matchplay will be staged again next year; inaugural Women’s World Matchplay live on Sky Sports Action from 1pm on Sunday, with Fallon Sherrock and Lisa Ashton among the players involved

Last Updated: 23/07/22 9:12am

Fallon Sherrock is one of the eight players participating in the inaugural Women's World Matchplay in Blackpool on Sunday

Fallon Sherrock is one of the eight players participating in the inaugural Women’s World Matchplay in Blackpool on Sunday

The Professional Darts Corporation has announced that its Women’s Series will expand to 24 events for the 2023 season with £145,000 in prize money to be offered in total.

The eight-player Women’s World Matchplay – which is being staged for the first time this Sunday in Blackpool, live on Sky Sports from 1pm – will return in 2023.

Fallon Sherrock and Lisa Ashton are among the players competing at the first Women’s World Matchplay.

Qualification for that event next year will come from a 12-month Order of Merit commencing from the Women’s Series events in August 2022.

Laura Turner has the lowdown on the players who will be battling it out at the inaugural Women's World Matchplay on Sunday, live on Sky Sports

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Laura Turner has the lowdown on the players who will be battling it out at the inaugural Women’s World Matchplay on Sunday, live on Sky Sports

Laura Turner has the lowdown on the players who will be battling it out at the inaugural Women’s World Matchplay on Sunday, live on Sky Sports

Live Women’s World Matchplay Darts

July 24, 2022, 1:00pm

Live on

The Order of Merit will include eight tournaments across the remaining two Women’s Series weekends of 2022 as well as an expected 12 events in the first half of 2023.

Twenty-four Women’s Series events will be held across six weekends next year. Each tournament is worth £5,000 in prize money.

PDC Chief Executive Matt Porter said: “We’ve been hugely encouraged by the increased interest in the PDC Women’s Series this year, with entries up by 50 percent to 100 on average, and there’s a lot of excitement ahead of the Betfred Women’s World Matchplay on Sunday.

“The Women’s World Matchplay will feature a great mix of experienced players and emerging faces, and it’s going to be fascinating to see them on stage at the Winter Gardens challenging for that title.

“With players also competing in the Cazoo Grand Slam of Darts and Cazoo World Championship, the opportunities for women within the PDC have never been greater and it’s a boost that we can continue to grow this aspect of the sport in 2023.”

Sherrock (left) plays Katie Sheldon in this Sunday's quarter-finals, with Lisa Ashton (right) to open up against Chloe O'Brien

Sherrock (left) plays Katie Sheldon in this Sunday’s quarter-finals, with Lisa Ashton (right) to open up against Chloe O’Brien

The Women’s Series will continue with events 13-16 in Hildesheim, Germany on August 27-28 ahead of the year’s final weekend in Wigan on October 29-30 with events 17-20.

2022 Women’s World Matchplay
Sunday July 24
Draw Bracket

(1) Lisa Ashton v (8) Chloe O’Brien
(4) Aileen de Graaf v (5) Laura Turner
(2) Fallon Sherrock v (7) Katie Sheldon
(3) Lorraine Winstanley v (6) Rhian Griffiths

Format
Quarter-Finals – Best of seven legs
Semi-Finals – Best of nine legs
Final – Best of 11 legs

Prize Money
Winner: £10,000
Runner-Up: £5,000
Semi-Finalists: £2,500
Quarter-Finalists: £1,250
Total: £25,000

Check out daily Darts news on skysports.com/darts, our app for mobile devices and our Twitter account @skysportsdarts. Watch the inaugural Women’s World Matchplay live on Sky Sports Action from 1pm on Sunday.

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LIV Golf is already looking to expand in 2023 with 14 events and a new name

LIV Golf is already looking to expand in 2023 with 14 events and a new name

NORTH PLAINS, Ore. — The LIV Golf Invitational Series will include more events and a name change in 2023.

The series will transition to the LIV Golf League next year and the events will grow from eight this year to 14 in future years with 48 contracted players on 12 teams. The number of events will be capped at 14.

The Saudi-backed series has grown faster than expected with eight of the top 50 players, and 20 of the top 100, in the current World Golf Ranking joining LIV to date.

The fields for this year’s eight events are fluid as more players defect from the PGA Tour. This week’s field at Pumpkin Ridge Golf Club outside of Portland has nine players not in the inaugural event held outside of London, including Brooks Koepka, Bryson DeChambeau, Patrick Reed, Matthew Wolff, Abraham Ancer and Carlos Ortiz.

The plan for 2023 is to open the season in March with 48 contracted players. The four-man teams will be set before the season, with the  players being selected and recruited by the 12 captains.

The contracts for each player varies with the longest being four years. Phil Mickelson is reported to have signed the largest contract, $200 million, followed by Dustin Johnson at $125 million.

The list of venues has not been finalized. What is known is the number of international sites will expand. This year, the series has stops in England, Bangkok and Saudi Arabia along with five United States sites: Portland; Bedminster, New Jersey; Boston; Chicago; and Miami.

After the first round of this week’s event, Ortiz is the leader of the 54-hole tournament at 5-under, one shot ahead of Johnson.

LIV is receiving $250 million from Saudi Arabia’s Public Investment Fund and offering purses of $25 million – including $5 million for the top three finishers in the team competition – for the first seven events and $50 million for the series finale in Doral.

The individual winner receives $4 million.

Tom D’Angelo is a journalist at the Palm Beach Post. You can reach him at tdangelo@pbpost.com

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Syracuse’s oldest brewery to expand with new events space

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Syracuse, N.Y. — Thinking of having a wedding, office party or other event at a local brewery?

Middle Ages Brewing Co., the city’s oldest standalone brewery, is working on an expansion that will improve its ability to host private events and offer more regularly scheduled live music.

The brewery will take over a 6,500-square-foot space on the second floor above its current taproom at 120 Wilkinson St. on the city’s near west side, owner Isaac Rubenstein said. The new space, which will include a stage, furnishings and its own bar, could be ready by late summer or fall, he said.

It might also have enough space for a pool table, cornhole or other games.

“But it will primarily be for private parties, concerts and things like that,” Rubenstein said.

The brewery doesn’t have its own kitchen, but the expansion will be accompanied by include more “grab and go” food items, Rubenstein said. There will be a staging area for food caterers during events.

Middle Ages is also pursuing a state “farm brewery” license, which will allow it to sell beverages from other New York beverage producers, including beer, wine and liquor.

Middle Ages, which was founded in 1995, has been hosting small private events in its original tasting room area in a corner of the property.

It frequently hosts bands in and around its current tasting room, which opened down the block from the original one in late 2017. In warm weather, the brewery invites bands to play for outdoor crowds from the building’s loading dock.

The loading dock shows, which sometimes draw big crowds, will continue, Rubenstein said.

The expansion of Middle Ages comes as the property’s owner, the Lahinch Group, plans improvements to the building facade and grounds, Rubenstein said. The brewery occupies a large part of the property, which had once been home to several industrial tenants, including an ice cream plant.

The new event space marks the biggest expansion at Middle Ages since the current 2,500-square-foot tasting room opened in 2017. That allowed Middle Ages for the first time to become a real gathering place, like a bar, a phenomenon that has been growing throughout the beer industry in recent years.

Before that, the Middle Ages sold beer and offered samples from the small original taproom at the corner of Wilkinson and Barker streets facing Leavenworth Park.

Isaac Rubenstein’s parents, Marc and Mary Rubenstein, opened Middle Ages in 1995. It was the first “microbrewery” in the city, although there were already a couple of brewpubs (restaurant/brewery combinations) in the area.

It has recently undergone several changes, including the elimination of its bottling line (it packages only in draft and cans today). It also replaced its original “open fermentation” or English-style brewing system with a more flexible closed system. That has allowed Middle Ages to add newer styles, such as lagers, sours, and hazy IPAs, to its original lineup of mostly English-style ales.

More on drinks and beverages in CNY:

Crafting drinks: Finger Lakes distillery takes creative approach to New York spirits (video)

National Beer Day: Get these monthly craft beer clubs delivered right to your door

A new local brewery / taproom is coming to Syracuse’s Destiny USA

How 20 Central New York beer makers came together to brew up some help for Ukraine

Don Cazentre writes about craft beer, wine, spirits and beverages for NYup.comsyracuse.com and The Post-Standard. Reach him at dcazentre@nyup.com, or follow him at NYup.com, on Twitter or Facebook.