Dutch star Gian van Veen has declared war on the PDC’s selection process, promising to launch a formal petition demanding an independent review into what he calls “systematic irregularities” in this year’s Premier League Darts season.
The 22-year-old, who has been knocking on the door of the sport’s elite, stopped short of accusing the organisation of outright corruption but insisted the 2026 Premier League line-up and weekly wildcard decisions have “destroyed the integrity” of the eight-man invitational event.
In a fiery backstage interview following his European Tour exit in Leverkusen, an animated Van Veen did not hold back.
“I have seen enough. The numbers do not lie,” he said, clutching a sheaf of printouts. “When you compare averages, TV major performances, floor titles, and head-to-head records against the chosen eight, there are players inside that Premier League who have no business being there while others are left out. That is an irregularity. I will petition the PDC formally next week.”
Although Van Veen refused to name names, the implication was clear: the Premier League selections have increasingly prioritised marketability over merit, with several high-profile players underperforming on the Order of Merit yet retaining spots, while in-form stars like Van Veen, Josh Rock, and Ryan Searle have been ignored.
The Premier League’s controversial “Condor Card” – a PDC board-chosen wildcard introduced last season – drew particular fury.
“One player got the Condor Card with three early-round exits in majors. Three! Meanwhile, I reach a European Tour final, post a 107 average on TV, and I am told ‘maybe next year.’ That is not a sporting decision. That is a television decision. It devalues the entire competition.”
Van Veen confirmed he has already drafted a petition calling for three key reforms:
- Full transparency on Premier League selection criteria, including published rankings of TV major points, ProTour performance, and head-to-head records for all contenders.
- Abolition of the Condor Card or its replacement with a statistically justified ‘best sixth-place player’ clause.
- An independent ombudsman to review any season where a top-eight Order of Merit player is excluded.
“I am not a rebel for fun,” Van Veen insisted. “I love the PDC. But if we do not speak now, the Premier League becomes a traveling pantomime. The fans see it. The players say it in private. I will be the one to put it on paper.”
Reaction from fellow players was swift but guarded. Michael van Gerwen – himself no stranger to criticising the PDC’s system – offered tepid support: “Gian has a point about consistency, but a petition? That’s strong. We will see.”
World Champion Luke Humphries urged caution, saying: “The Premier League has always been invitational. It’s not a major ranking event. I understand frustration, but a petition feels like burning bridges.”
The PDC responded with a brief statement: “The Premier League selection process is robust, fair, and designed to balance merit with entertainment. No irregularities have occurred. We have received no formal petition from Mr van Veen.”
Undeterred, Van Veen said he expects to gather at least 30 signatures from tour card holders within a fortnight.
“They can call me angry, emotional, young. I don’t care. When three different players outside the top 16 can prove they outperformed two in the Premier League on every major metric, the system is broken. The petition goes in, with or without the big names.”
As darts enters a new era of commercial growth, Van Veen’s rebellion threatens to open a long-simmering wound: is the Premier League a true championship, or an entertainment product where credibility takes second place to box office appeal?
For Gian van Veen, the answer is clear. And he is putting it in writing.













