Dimitri Van den Bergh battles to revive form at World Cup
**Dimitri Van den Bergh** is back on the World Cup stage on 11 June 2026, hoping to erase the sting of a 4‑3 loss to the Philippines a year earlier. The Belgian star, now ranked 37th, pairs again with Mike De Decker as Belgium’s hopes hinge on his comeback.
The 2025 campaign saw Van den Bergh take a two‑month mental break after a string of poor results. "Mentally off," he admitted, and his form slipped dramatically. In the group stage of the World Cup, Belgium edged Latvia but fell 4‑3 to the Philippines, marking the first time the nation failed to clear the opening round.
Since the setback, Van den Bergh has focused on a physical and mental reset. In a recent interview with *Nieuwsblad*, he said he feels "much healthier and stronger" than the previous year. The changes showed a modest lift: after two winless months, he reached an eighth‑final in April and a quarter‑final in May, his best ProTour finish since 2024.
Belgium entered the tournament as the sixth‑seeded group leader, but expectations are low. De Decker sits at world No. 21, while Van den Bergh’s slide to 37 threatens his PDC tour card, which requires a top‑64 finish in the two‑year ranking. A solid run could secure his place; a repeat of 2025 would likely see him drop out of the elite circuit.
The group draw pits Belgium against Hong Kong and Slovenia, both considered darts minnows. On paper, the match‑ups look favorable, yet Van den Bergh’s recent form remains fragile. A win against either side would boost confidence, but the pressure to perform is palpable as he seeks to prove the mental reset is more than talk.
A strong showing could catapult him back into the top‑30 and restore his reputation as Belgium’s best darts player. It would also give him momentum heading into the ProTour events later in the season, where he aims to add more deep runs to his résumé. Failure, however, may force him to reconsider his approach ahead of the next qualification window.
The stakes are clear: Van den Bergh must convert his recent health gains into match wins, or risk slipping further down the rankings. The world will be watching his performance in Frankfurt this June, hoping the "Dancing Dimi" can finally dance his way back to the top.