PDC World Youth Championship: Champion Van Veen faces Beau Greaves

Darts World

PDC World Youth Championship: Champion Van Veen faces Beau Greaves image

PDC

All sports have those moment that mark chapters in their development. Matches or moments that, those who witness them instinctively realise, mark turning points in sporting history. One such may well happen on the Minehead stage this evening.

Newly crowned European Champion Gian van Veen is already in Minehead, although his interesst in the main event ended relatively early, he now left with one burning mission: defend his PDC World Youth Championship crown in what promises to be a scintillating, pulse-hammering showdown with darting phenomenon Beau Greaves (pictured). If you were looking for a final drenched in narrative, tension and pure tungsten theatre — congratulations, you’ve found it.

Last year on the Butlins main stage, Van Veen survived a Dutch civil war of epic proportions, edging compatriot Jurjen van der Velde in a nerve-shredding classic. Having already suffered heartbreak at the hands of Luke Littler the year before, Van Veen was desperate to carve his name into the trophy beside major winners like Luke Humphries, Michael Smith and Dimitri van den Bergh.

GIAN VAN VEEN IN FACTS AND FIGURESCheck out GVV's full career profile on dartsdatabase.co.uk

Victory tasted sweet — but the agony for Van der Velde was unmistakable. The young Dutchman squandered match chances, slumping in despair while Van Veen, respectfully embraced a countryman who had just felt the very same pain he endured twelve months earlier.

GVV LOVES A BIT OF BULLYVan Veen tames the bullseye

Now the 23-year-old marches into his third straight final, poised once again under the Minehead lights — but this time, he walks toward a different storm entirely: Beau Greaves. A phenom. A record-breaking wrecking ball. A three-time Lakeside World Champion who plays the game with ruthless serenity and frightening precision. Both tore through elite fields at Wigan’s Robin Park to earn their place on the sport’s grandest youth stage.

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Van Veen’s route was a marathon of quality. After dispatching a pair of fellow Dutchmen early on, he squeezed past Aidan O’Hara, swept aside Development Tour runaway leader, Cam Crabtree, and outclassed Polish danger-man Sebastian Bialecki to stamp his ticket to Minehead.

Greaves, meanwhile, bulldozed her way to the final with the clam confidence of a born champion. She obliterated Coby Jones-Swanson, breezed through Danny Jansen, then dispatched Tyler Thorpe and Liam Maendl-Lawrance to move within touching distance of history. But the final hurdle was a monster: Luke Littler.

BEAU GREAVES IN FACTS AND FIGURESCheck out Beau 'N' Arrow's full career profile on dartsdatabase.co.uk

In a match that will echo for years as one of the greatest youth showdowns ever witnessed — both players averaging somewhere in the stratosphere — it was Beau who snatched the decider to set up a mouthwatering duel with the defending champion.

RECORD BREAKING BEAU GREAVESHighest women's TV average ever recorded

Sunday’s final sits perfectly sandwiched between the Players Championship semi-finals and the main event finale. There was a moment when Van Veen could have been staring down three matches in a row, but his second round loss to Krzysztof Ratajski now grants him the luxury of total focus — all eyes locked on the Youth Championship crown.

As for the final, it carries history in both hands. If Van Veen triumphs, he joins Dimitri van den Bergh as only the second player ever to win the World Youth title twice. Should Greaves be successful … she becomes the first female to ever lift it. Either way, Minehead is about to witness what should be a classic.

The 2025 World Youth Championship and  Ladbrokes Players Championship Finals are being broadcast live on ITV4 in the UK and through the PDC's worldwide broadcast partners including DAZN and Viaplay, while coverage is also available on PDCTV (excluding subscribers in the UK, Germany, Austria and Switzerland).

Sunday November 23

Afternoon Session (1245-1700 GMT)
Quarter-Finals

Gerwyn Price v Daryl Gurney
Luke Littler v Chris Dobey
Nathan Aspinall v Josh Rock
James Wade v Jermaine Wattimena
Best of 19 Legs

Evening Session (1900 GMT)
Semi-Finals
Price/Gurney v Littler/Dobey
Aspinall/Rock v Wade/Wattimena
Best of 21 legs

Winmau World Youth Championship Final


Beau Greaves v Gian van Veen
Best of 11 legs

Final
   v
Best of 21 legs

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News Correspondent