England are defending champions, after Humphries and Michael Smith won the title last year.
Forty nations from across the globe are descending on Frankfurt in Germany to compete in the event, which is organised by the Professional Darts Corporation (PDC) and sponsored by online betting site BetVictor.
The World Cup of Darts will be held across four days from Thursday 12 June to Sunday 15 June this year.
The Eissporthalle in Frankfurt am Main will host the tournament once again.
Frankfurt will play host to the World Cup of Darts 2025 (Photo: Gogosvm/Getty)What is the format for the World Cup of Darts
Normal rules apply with a straight start and a double to finish.
The winner of each group will go through to the second round and then it will be a knockout tournament.
First round (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 legsWorld Cup of Darts 2025 schedule
Thursday 12 June at 6pm (BST)
First group matches (Seeded Nation v Nation 2)
Sweden v Lithuania (G) Czechia v Chinese Taipei (J) Croatia v Japan (K) Republic of Ireland v Gibraltar (D) Canada v Malaysia (F) USA v Hong Kong (I) Poland v South Africa (E) Belgium v Latvia (B) Netherlands v Italy (A) Germany v Portugal (C) Austria v Spain (H) Finland v New Zealand (L)Friday 13 June – Evening Session at 6pm (BST)
Third group matches (Thursday’s Winning Team v Nation 3)Schedule in the same group order as Thursday’s evening session
Saturday 14 June – Evening session at 6pm (BST)
Second Round x4
Saturday 15 June – Evening session at 6pm (BST)
Semi-FinalsFinal
Gerwyn Price and Jonny Clayton (l-r) will represent Wales (Photo: Joris Verwijst/ BSR Agency/Getty)Who are the teams for the World Cup of Darts?
The seeded nations go straight through to the second round. They are:
1) England – Luke Humphries & Luke Littler 2) Wales – Jonny Clayton & Gerwyn Price 3) Scotland – Gary Anderson & Peter Wright 4) Northern Ireland – Josh Rock & Daryl GurneyThe unseeded nations are:
Argentina – Jesus Salate & Victor Guillin Australia – Damon Heta & Simon Whitlock Austria – Mensur Suljovic & Rusty-Jake Rodriguez Bahrain – Sadeq Mohamed & Hasan 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 Hyllgaardhus 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 & Tan Jenn Ming 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 & Ricardo Fernandez Sweden – Jeffrey de Graaf & Oskar Lukasiak Switzerland – Stefan Bellmont & Alex Fehlmann USA – Danny Lauby & Jules van DongenThe 12 groups for the unseeded nations are:
Group A – (5) Netherlands, Itay, Hungary Group B – (6) Belgium, Latvia, Philippines Group C – (7) Germany, Portugal, Singapore Group D – (8) Republic of Ireland, Gibraltar, China Group E – (9) Poland, South Africa, Norway Group F – (10) Canada, Malaysia, Denmark Group G – (11) Sweden, Lithuania, France Group H – (12) Austria, Spain, Australia Group I – (13) USA, Hong Kong, Bahrain Group J – (14) Czechia, Chinese Taipei, India Group K – (15) Croatia, Japan, Switzerland Group L – (16) Finland, New Zealand, ArgentinaHow can I watch the World Cup of Darts?
Viewers will need a subscription to Sky Sports., which costs from £22/ month, or stream with Now TV Sports, which costs from £14.99 for a day membership.
There will also be live coverage on PDCTV, which costs from £2.99 for a one-day pass.
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