Dat kost een hoop centen trouwens, als je je kwalificeert moet je 700 pond 'borg' inleggen. Buiten de 250 pond inleg en je vervoers- en verblijfkosten naar/in Engeland.
edit: Oh, er staat een mooi overzicht in de link
'MY WARNING: If you do qualify through Q School (after stumping up the cash to do so), you’re one of 128 tour card holders. So there’s 127 other players on the tour who also are very decent, and early rounds you’ll play a top seed, who has years of experience on the tour, and will hit 100+ averages on the floor almost every game.
You could be investing a lot of money and possibly getting very very little back. Yes the top 32 now earn enough to play darts full time (and practice full time), but at least half the pro tour have to work full time, and many lose money doing the tour. There will be 20 player championship events in 2016, and 6x UK Open qualifiers. If you don’t qualify for anything else, that’s pretty much your minimum year.
Each proTour/UK Open qualifier takes ?105 entry. So that’s ?2,750 in entries fees before you win a penny. Now remember you’ve got travel (across the UK, and into Europe if you qualify for those events) – then pay for a hotel for 2-4 nights per weekend (you’ll need to be there Fri night really, and leave Sunday or even Monday if you’ve been drinking and have no way to get home!). Add in food & drink – and a single year’s tour can cost ?6,000 or so (less these days now there’s no Vegas or further afield). If you look at the PDC rankings, skip the huge money earners, and go down to 79th (at time of writing), Mark Dudbridge, who has about ?12,000 against his name. Now that’s TWO YEARS money won, so he’s averaged ?6k a year – which I’ve said is what it will cost you. John Part, the legend, has slipped to 60th – still over half way up the rankings. He’s got ?24k over two years. ?12k a year, so if he was living in the UK, he’d possibly be making ?6k a year on my numbers. Not enough to live on by any means, but pretty decent if you’ve got a full time job, or sponsorship paying the ?6k a year costs. So the big question: can you afford to lose ?6,000 and possibly get NOTHING BACK? '