BetVictor World Cup of Darts 2025 | Draw, Live Scores, Results and Schedule of Play
The BetVictor World Cup of Darts returns to Frankfurt in 2025, and you can follow the latest results, tables and schedule of play here.
The 15th staging of the World Cup of Darts will take place at the Eissporthalle from June 12-15 as 40 nations compete for the coveted title in the unique pairs event.
The top four ranked nations – based on the lowest cumulative PDC Order of Merit ranking of the two competing players – are seeded and will enter at the Second Round stage.
This includes reigning champions England, two-time champions Wales and Scotland, and fourth seeds Northern Ireland – who reached the semi-finals in 2014 and 2016.
The remaining 36 nations have been split into 12 groups of three for the round-robin phase – including 12 seeded nations – from which each group winner will progress.
Luke Humphries and Luke Littler will pair up for the first time as they bid to successfully defend the title for England, with Humphries and Michael Smith having triumphed 12 months ago.
Two-time champions Wales are represented by multiple major winners Gerwyn Price and Jonny Clayton, while Scotland, who have also claimed the crown on two occasions, will see Gary Anderson and Peter Wright look to restore their former glories.
Josh Rock and Daryl Gurney will link up for the first time as Northern Ireland’s pairing, while hosts Germany are represented by Martin Schindler and debutant Ricardo Pietreczko.
Damon Heta and Simon Whitlock return for 2022 champions Australia, while Danny Noppert and Gian van Veen form a new-look Netherlands duo.
All matches will be contested in a pairs format, with group stage fixtures best of seven legs, Second Round, Quarter-Finals and Semi-Finals best of 15 and the final best of 19.
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BetVictor World Cup of Darts 2025 Schedule
All times BST (local time +1 hour)
Thursday June 12
6pm-11pm
First Group Matches
Sweden 4-1 Lithuania (G)
Czechia 4-2 Chinese Taipei (J)
Croatia 3-4 Japan (K)
Republic of Ireland 4-2 Gibraltar (D)
Canada 1-4 Malaysia (F)
USA 1-4 Hong Kong (I)
Poland 4-3 South Africa (E)
Belgium 4-1 Latvia (B)
Netherlands 4-0 Italy (A)
Germany 4-2 Portugal (C)
Austria 4-1 Spain (H)
Finland 0-4 New Zealand (L)
Friday June 13
Afternoon Session (11am-4pm)
Second Group Matches
Lithuania 4-3 France (G)
Chinese Taipei 4-2 India (J)
Croatia 4-3 Switzerland (K)
Gibraltar 4-2 China (D)
Canada 1-4 Denmark (F)
USA 4-1 Bahrain (I)
South Africa 4-1 Norway (E)
Latvia 2-4 Philippines (B)
Italy 4-0 Hungary (A)
Portugal 2-4 Singapore (C)
Spain 0-4 Australia (H)
Finland 1-4 Argentina (L)
Evening Session (6pm-11pm)
Third Group Matches
Sweden 3-4 France (G)
Czechia 4-2 India (J)
Japan 1-4 Switzerland (K)
Republic of Ireland 2-4 China (D)
Malaysia 4-1 Denmark (F)
Hong Kong 4-0 Bahrain (I)
Poland 2-4 Norway (E)
Belgium 3-4 Philippines (B)
Netherlands 4-0 Hungary (A)
Germany 4-0 Singapore (C)
Austria 1-4 Australia (H)
New Zealand 3-4 Argentina (L)
Saturday June 14
Second Round
Afternoon Session (12pm-4pm)
Malaysia 3-8 Czechia
Hong Kong 8-4 Sweden
Switzerland 3-8 Republic of Ireland
Northern Ireland 8-2 South Africa
Evening Session (6pm-10pm)
Wales 8-2 Philippines
Scotland 0-8 Netherlands
England 4-8 Germany
Argentina 1-8 Australia
Sunday June 15
Afternoon Session (12pm-4pm)
Quarter-Finals
Northern Ireland 8-5 Republic of Ireland
Germany 8-7 Australia
Wales 8-4 Hong Kong
Netherlands 8-2 Czechia
Evening Session (6pm-10pm)
Semi-Finals
Germany 1-8 Northern Ireland
Wales 8-5 Netherlands
Final
Northern Ireland 10-9 Wales
BetVictor World Cup of Darts 2025 Team Pairings
England (1) – Luke Littler & Luke Humphries
Wales (2) – Jonny Clayton & Gerwyn Price
Scotland (3) – Gary Anderson & Peter Wright
Northern Ireland (4) – Josh Rock & Daryl Gurney
Argentina – Jesus Salata & Victor Guillin
Australia – Damon Heta & Simon Whitlock
Austria – Mensur Suljovic & Rusty-Jake Rodriguez
Bahrain – Sadiq Dasmal & Hassan Bucheeri
Belgium – Mike De Decker & Dimitri Van den Bergh
Canada – Matt Campbell & Jim Long
China – Xiaochen Zong & Lihao Wen
Chinese Taipei – Pupo Teng-Lieh & An-Sheng Lu
Croatia – Pero Ljubic & Boris Krcmar
Czechia – Karel Sedlacek & Petr Krivka
Denmark – Benjamin Reus & Andreas Hyllgaardshus
Finland – Teemu Harju & Marko Kantele
France – Thibault Tricole & Jacques Labre
Germany – Martin Schindler & Ricardo Pietreczko
Gibraltar – Craig Galliano & Justin Hewitt
Hong Kong – Man Lok Leung & Lok Yin Lee
Hungary – György Jehirszki & Gergely Lakatos
India – Nitin Kumar & Mohan Goel
Italy – Michele Turetta & Massimo Dalla Rosa
Japan – Ryusei Azemoto & Tomoya Goto
Latvia – Madars Razma & Valters Melderis
Lithuania – Darius Labanauskas & Mindaugas Barauskas
Malaysia – Tengku Shah & Jenn Ming Tan
Netherlands – Danny Noppert & Gian van Veen
New Zealand – Haupai Puha & Mark Cleaver
Norway – Cor Dekker & Kent Joran Sivertsen
Philippines – Lourence Ilagan & Paolo Nebrida
Poland – Krzysztof Ratajski & Radek Szaganski
Portugal – Jose de Sousa & Bruno Nascimento
Republic of Ireland – William O’Connor & Keane Barry
Singapore – Paul Lim & Phuay Wei Tan
South Africa – Cameron Carolissen & Devon Petersen
Spain – Daniel Zapata Castillo & Ricardo Fernandez Carballo
Sweden – Jeffrey de Graaf & Oskar Lukasiak
Switzerland – Stefan Bellmont & Alex Fehlmann
USA – Danny Lauby & Jules van Dongen