Three time World Ladies Champion, Beau Greaves is widely regarded as one of the brightest and most dominant figures in women’s darts, combining prodigious scoring, match temperament, and an unrelenting will to win. As a multiple-time world champion and record-setting (PDC) Women’s Series force, she has transcended gender boundaries to challenge herself continuously in mixed fields.
- Name: Beau Greaves
- Nickname: Beau ‘n’ Arrow
- Born: 9 January 2004
- Place of Birth: Doncaster, South Yorkshire, England
- Nationality: English
- Laterality: Right-handed
- Darts: 23g Target Signature Gen 1
- Walk-on Tune: Rockin’ All Over the World – Status Quo
Greaves first began competing in tournaments from a very young age, entering girls’ events and steadily progressing into women’s and mixed competition. In youth and regional circuits, she claimed multiple junior and girls’ titles, including back-to-back Girls’ World Masters titles in 2017 and 2018. She also hit a nine-dart finish in her hometown as a teenager — showing early signs of elite scoring ability.
Her first major breakthrough came in 2022, when she captured her first World Darts Federation (WDF) Women’s World Championship title at just 18 years old, becoming the youngest ever winner. Since then, she has retained the world title in 2023 and 2024, putting her in exclusive company (only alongside Trina Gulliver) as a three-time consecutive champion.
Beau’s dominance extends across major and platinum WDF events: she’s multiple times champion of the World Masters, Dutch Open, Australian Open and more.
BEAU GREAVES IN FACTS AND FIGURES: Check out Beau ‘N’ Arrow’s full career profile on dartsdatabase.co.uk
In parallel, she has vigorously competed on the PDC Women’s Series, where she has amassed a record 42 titles. She has also successfully taken on the PDC Women’s World Matchplay, winning it on debut in 2023 and defending it in 2024.
In 2024, she made waves by breaking the women’s record for highest televised average (114.56) during a MODUS Super Series week, while going undefeated across the week. That same year, she defended her Women’s Matchplay title (defeating Fallon Sherrock 6–3 in the final) and continued pushing herself into mixed (men’s) competition in major events like the Grand Slam of Darts.
By 2025, she added two PDC Challenge Tour titles — becoming the first woman to win multiple such events in the same year. She also made her UK Open debut, giving world No. 1 Luke Humphries a real test in the fourth round (losing 10–7 after leading 7–5).
RECORD BREAKING BEAU GREAVES: Highest women’s TV average ever recorded
In October 2025, she became the first female player ever to reach the PDC World Youth Championship final, after a barnstorming semi-final win over reigning youth champ Luke Littler.
She has accepted her place at the PDC World Championship for 2025 and her Pro Tour card for the following season.
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