Gerwyn Price, Michael van Gerwen and Dimitri Van den Bergh are just some of the names competing in Germany as they represent their respective countries in the 2023 World Cup of Darts.
The action kicks off on Thursday June 15 for the first round of matches, with action all the way until the sem-finals and final on Sunday June 18.
DAZN will show the action live in Brazil, Italy, Spain, Japan and the USA.
Here's everything you need to know about 2023 World Cup of Darts.
What time is the 2023 World Cup of Darts? Date, start time
- Date: Thursday, June 15
- Start time: 6 p.m. BST / 7 p.m. CET / 1 p.m. ET
The event is set to get underway at 6 p.m. BST / 7 p.m. CET / 1 p.m. ET.
What channel/stream is 2023 World Cup of Darts?
- Brazil, Italy, Spain, Japan and the USA: DAZN
The 2023 World Cup of Darts will be available to stream live on DAZN in certain regions, click here to find out more.
Where is the 2023 World Cup of Darts?
The event is being held at Eissporthalle, Frankfurt, in Germany.
2023 World Cup of Darts schedule
Thursday June 15 (1900 local time, 1800 BST)
Group Stage – First Matches x12
Team 1 v Team 2 from each group
- Switzerland v Italy
- Poland v Portugal
- Czech Republic v Singapore
- Spain v South Africa
- Republic of Ireland v Thailand
- Northern Ireland v France
- Belgium v Finland
- Canada v India
- Austria v Denmark
- Germany v Hong Kong
- Australia v Guyana
- Latvia v New Zealand
Friday June 16
Afternoon Session (1200 local time, 1100 BST)
Group Stage – Second Matches x12
- Loser First Match v Team 3
Evening Session (1900 local time, 1800 BST)
Group Stage – Final Matches x12
- Winner First Match v Team 3
Saturday June 17
Afternoon Session (1300 local time, 1200 BST)
- Second Round x4
Evening Session (1900 local time, 1800 BST)
- Second Round x4
Sunday June 18
Afternoon Session (1300 local time, 1200 BST)
- Quarter-Finals
Evening Session (1900 local time, 1800 BST)
- Semi-Finals
- Final
2023 World Cup of Darts format
- Group Stage - Best of seven legs
- Second Round - Best of 15 legs
- Quarter-Finals - Best of 15 legs
- Semi-Finals - Best of 15 legs
- Final - Best of 19 legs
All games will be played in a Doubles format.
2023 World Cup of Darts competing nations & pairings
- Australia - Damon Heta, Simon Whitlock
- Austria - Mensur Suljovic, Rowby-John Rodriguez
- Bahrain - Basem Mahmood, Abdulnasser Yusuf
- Belgium - Dimitri Van den Bergh, Kim Huybrechts
- Canada - Matt Campbell, Jeff Smith
- China - Xiaochen Zong, Lihao Wen
- Croatia - Boris Krcmar, Romeo Grbavac
- Czech Republic - Adam Gawlas, Karel Sedlacek
- Denmark - Vladimir Andersen, Benjamin Reus
- England - Michael Smith, Rob Cross
- Finland - Marko Kantele, Paavo Myller
- France - Thibault Tricole, Jacques Labre
- Germany - Gabriel Clemens, Martin Schindler
- Gibraltar - Craig Galliano, Justin Hewitt
- Guyana - Norman Madhoo, Sudesh Fitzgerald
- Hong Kong - Man Lok Leung, Lok Yin Lee
- Hungary - Patrik Kovács, Levente Sárai
- Iceland - Hallgrimur Egilsson, Vitor Charrua
- India - Prakash Jiwa, Amit Gilitwala
- Italy - Michele Turetta, Massimo Dante
- Japan - Jun Matsuda, Tomoya Goto
- Latvia - Madars Razma, Dmitriy Zhukov
- Lithuania - Darius Labanauskas, Mindaugas Barauskas
- Netherlands - Michael van Gerwen, Danny Noppert
- New Zealand - Ben Robb, Warren Parry
- Northern Ireland - Brendan Dolan, Daryl Gurney
- Philippines - Christian Perez, Lourence Ilagan
- Poland - Krzysztof Ratajski, Krzysztof Kciuk
- Portugal - Jose de Sousa, Luis Ameixa
- Republic of Ireland - William O'Connor, Keane Barry
- Scotland - Peter Wright, Gary Anderson
- Singapore - Paul Lim, Harith Lim
- South Africa - Devon Petersen, Vernon Bouwers
- Spain - Jose Justicia, Tony Martinez
- Sweden - Dennis Nilsson, Oskar Lukasiak
- Switzerland - Stefan Bellmont, Marcel Walpen
- Thailand - Attapol Eupakaree, Yong Gaweenuntavong
- Ukraine - Vladyslav Omelchenko, Illia Pekaruk
- USA - Jules van Dongen, Leonard Gates
- Wales - Gerwyn Price, Jonny Clayton