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World Cup of Darts 2024 | Day One Preview and Order of Play

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World Cup of Darts 2024 | Draw, Live Scores and Schedule of Play

Jamie Shaw in World Cup of Darts 02 Jul 2024
Wales are the reigning champions (Photo by Jonas Hunold/PDC)

The World Cup of Darts returns to Frankfurt in 2024, and you can follow the latest results and schedule of play here.

The 14th staging of the World Cup of Darts features 40 two-player teams competing for £450,000 in prize money at the Eissporthalle from June 27-30.

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.

The remaining 36 teams are split into 12 groups of three for the round-robin first round – including 12 seeded nations – from which each group winner will progress.

Wales are the defending champions after they defeated Scotland 10-2 in last year’s final to claim the title for the second time.

However, they will be without Gerwyn Price in this year’s event after the former World Champion withdrew for health reasons, meaning debutant Jim Williams will now partner Jonny Clayton.

World number one and World Champion Luke Humphries will make his debut for top seeds England alongside former World Champion Michael Smith.

Michael van Gerwen makes his first appearance in the PDC World Cup since 2021 as he returns to partner Danny Noppert for the Netherlands.

Last year’s runners-up Scotland are again represented by two-time World Champions Peter Wright and Gary Anderson, while 2022 winners Damon Heta and Simon Whitlock link up again for Australia.

Dimitri Van den Bergh and Kim Huybrechts make up the Belgian side, while Josh Rock makes his debut for Northern Ireland alongside stalwart Brendan Dolan.

Hosts Germany are represented by Martin Schindler and Gabriel Clemens, while Chinese Taipei will make their World Cup debut and Malaysia return for the first time in a decade.

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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World Cup of Darts 2024 Schedule of Play

All times BST (local time +1 hour)

Seeded through to Second Round
England (1)
Wales (2)
Netherlands (3)
Scotland (4)

Group A
Belgium (5)
Singapore
Philippines

Group B
Northern Ireland (6)
South Africa
Switzerland

Group C
Germany (7)
New Zealand
Finland

Group D
Australia (8)
Japan
Hong Kong

Group E
Republic of Ireland (9)
Lithuania
Chinese Taipei

Group F
Austria (10)
China
Guyana

Group G
Poland (11)
Norway
Hungary

Group H
Czech Republic (12)
Bahrain
Iceland

Group I
Croatia (13)
Malaysia
Canada

Group J
France (14)
Latvia
Denmark

Group K
Sweden (15)
Spain
Gibraltar

Group L
USA (16)
Portugal
Italy

Thursday June 27

Group Stage – First Matches

6pm-10pm
Sweden 4-0 Spain (Group K)
Czechia 4-3 Bahrain (Group H)
France 4-1 Latvia (Group J)
Croatia 4-0 Malaysia (Group I)
Republic of Ireland 4-2 Lithuania (Group E)
Poland 4-2 Norway (Group G)
USA 2-4 Portugal (Group L)
Belgium 4-2 Singapore (Group A)
Northern Ireland 4-1 South Africa (Group B)
Germany 4-3 New Zealand (Group C)
Australia 4-3 Japan (Group D)
Austria 4-0 China (Group F)

Friday June 28

Group Stage – Second Matches

11am-4pm
Spain 3-4 Gibraltar (Group K)
Bahrain 0-4 Iceland (Group H)
Latvia 4-2 Denmark (Group J)
Malaysia 3-4 Canada (Group I)
Lithuania 2-4 Chinese Taipei (Group E)
Norway 4-3 Hungary (Group G)
USA 3-4 Italy (Group L)
Singapore 1-4 Philippines (Group A)
South Africa 4-2 Switzerland (Group B)
New Zealand 4-0 Finland (Group C)
Japan 1-4 Hong Kong (Group D)
China 4-2 Guyana (Group F)

Group Stage – Final Matches

6pm-10pm
Sweden 4-1 Gibraltar (Group K)
Czechia 4-0 Iceland (Group H)
France 4-3 Denmark (Group J)
Croatia 4-2 Canada (Group I)
Republic of Ireland 3-4 Chinese Taipei (Group E)
Poland 4-1 Hungary (Group G)
Portugal 3-4 Italy (Group L)
Belgium 4-0 Philippines (Group A)
Northern Ireland 4-3 Switzerland (Group B)
Germany 4-1 Finland (Group C)
Australia 4-2 Hong Kong (Group D)
Austria 4-1 Guyana (Group F)

Saturday June 29

Second Round

12pm-4pm
Czechia 6-8 Sweden
Austria 8-4 Chinese Taipei
Scotland 8-2 Poland
Italy 8-7 Australia

6pm-10pm
Northern Ireland 8-7 Germany
England 8-3 France
Wales 6-8 Croatia
Netherlands 2-8 Belgium

Sunday June 30

Afternoon Session (12pm-4pm)

Quarter-Finals
Austria 8-7 Croatia
Belgium 8-7 Italy
England 8-4 Northern Ireland
Scotland 8-7 Sweden

Evening Session (6pm-10pm)

Semi-Finals
Austria 8-3 Belgium
England 8-4 Scotland

Final
England 10-6 Austria

Competing Nations & Pairings
Australia – Damon Heta, Simon Whitlock
Austria – Rowby-John Rodriguez, Mensur Suljovic
Bahrain – Basem Mahmood, Duda Durra
Belgium – Dimitri Van den Bergh, Kim Huybrechts
Canada – Matt Campbell, David Cameron
China – Xiaochen Zong, Chengan Liu
Croatia – Boris Krcmar, Romeo Grbavac
Czechia – Adam Gawlas, Karel Sedlacek
Denmark – Benjamin Reus, Claus Bendix Nielsen
England – Luke Humphries, Michael Smith
Finland – Teemu Harju, Marko Kantele
France – Thibault Tricole, Jacques Labre
Germany – Martin Schindler, Gabriel Clemens
Gibraltar – Justin Hewitt, Craig Galliano
Guyana – Norman Madhoo, Sudesh Fitzgerald
Hong Kong – Lok Yin Lee, Man Lok Leung
Hungary – Gabor Jagicza, Nandor Major
Iceland – Arngrimur Olafsson, Petur Rudrik Gudmundsson
Ireland – William O’Connor, Keane Barry
Italy – Michele Turetta, Massimo Dalla Rosa
Japan – Tomoya Goto, Ryusei Azemoto
Latvia – Madars Razma, Valters Melderis
Lithuania – Darius Labanauskas, Mindaugas Barauskas
Malaysia – Siik Hwang Wong, Mohd Nasir Bin Jantan
Netherlands – Michael van Gerwen, Danny Noppert
New Zealand – Haupai Puha, Ben Robb
Northern Ireland – Josh Rock, Brendan Dolan
Norway – Cor Dekker, Håkon Bjørge Helling
Philippines – Christian Perez, Alexis Toylo
Poland – Krzysztof Ratajski, Radek Szaganski
Portugal – Jose de Sousa, David Gomes
Scotland – Peter Wright, Gary Anderson
Singapore – Paul Lim, Harith Lim
South Africa – Johan Geldenhuys, Cameron Carolissen
Spain – Jose Justicia, Jesus Noguera
Sweden – Jeffrey de Graaf, Oskar Lukasiak
Switzerland – Stefan Bellmont, Bruno Stöckli
Chinese Taipei – Teng-Lieh Pupo, An-Sheng Lu
USA – Danny Lauby, Jules van Dongen
Wales – Jonny Clayton, Jim Williams

Prize Fund (per team)
Winners: £80,000
Runners-up: £50,000
Semi-Final losers: £30,000
Quarter-Final losers: £20,000
Last 16 losers: £9,000
Second in group: £5,000
Third in group: £4,000