Steve Beaton
Steve Beaton is an English former professional darts player who competed in British Darts Organisation, World Darts Federation, Professional Darts Corporation and World Seniors Darts events. Nicknamed "the Bronzed Adonis", Beaton won the BDO World Darts Championship|1996 BDO World Championship]. He was ranked BDO world number one in 1993 and 1994.
Before switching to the PDC in 2001, Beaton won the 1993 World Masters, the 1995 and 1996 Dutch Opens, and also achieved success in the WDF Europe Cup and WDF World Cup. In the PDC, Beaton finished as the runner-up at the 2009 European Championship. He also won three PDC Pro Tour titles, including the 2013 German Darts Masters on the European Tour. Beaton retired from professional darts at the end of 2024, handing in his PDC Tour Card. He reached the semi-finals at the 2025 World Seniors Darts Championship.
Background
Beaton was born in Coventry, Warwickshire, England.BDO career
Beaton made his World Championship debut in 1992, at a time when the world darts championship was still a unified tournament. He lost in the first round to Chris Johns 1β3, but he was encouraged by his performance in the same tournament in 1993 when he achieved a huge upset win over the tournament favourite and former world champion Dennis Priestley, and he also beat another former world champion in Bob Anderson, before losing in the semi-final to Alan Warriner. He became a full-time professional later in 1993 at a time after the split, which saw the WDC players banned from all BDO tournaments β and Beaton went on to win the prestigious Winmau World Masters, beating Les Wallace in the final.After the WDC players were expelled from all BDO tournaments in April 1993, it left Beaton as the top seeded player for the 1994 and 1995 BDO world championships, but he lost in the first round both times, to Nick Gedney and Dave Askew respectively, both times losing 2β3 after leading 2β0. But in 1996, he finally delivered at the BDO world championships, beating Co StompΓ©, John Part, Martin Adams, Andy Fordham and then Richie Burnett in the final to clinch the BDO World Championship.
When he came back to defend his world title in 1997, Beaton was within the width of the double 10 wire of reaching the final. During his tight semi-final match against Marshall James, which went all the way to a sudden death eleventh leg in the ninth and deciding set, Beaton narrowly missed a 140 checkout for the match by putting his one match dart right on the wire of the double 10, hitting the single 10. James then responded with a 106 checkout to win the match and end Beaton's title defence.
Beaton won many Open titles during his career in BDO tournaments including the Dutch, Danish, Belgian and Swedish Opens.
Beaton continued to play in the BDO version of the World Championship until 2001, while also participating in some televised PDC events. When the PDC changed the eligibility rules for their televised tournaments from the start of 2002, Beaton decided to switch to playing in the PDC World Darts Championship.
PDC career
Beaton has never made the same impact in the PDC, having failed to reach the quarter-finals in any of his attempts at the world crown, his best finishes being three Round of 16 losses in 2002, 2004 and 2020. In 2002, when the tournament was still only five rounds, he got knocked out in round two by John Part 0β6. In 2004 when he got a bye to the third round and was knocked out in round four by Mark Dudbridge 1β4. His poor form has seen him slip down the world rankings at times, but he has nearly always maintained a position in the top 32, apart from some periods in 2007 and 2008 when his ranking occasionally went down to around number 40. Just when he looked in danger of falling away in the rankings at that time, a big improvement in his form in 2009 and 2010 saw Beaton's ranking back into the top 32, where he has been in the decade since. Beaton has reached the semi-finals in four major PDC tournaments β the 2001 World Matchplay when he lost to Richie Burnett, the 2004 UK Open when he lost to Roland Scholten, the 2004 World Grand Prix when he lost to Alan Warriner, and the Grand Slam of Darts">2015 Grand Slam of Darts">Grand Slam of Darts when he lost to Scott Waites.Beaton saw a rise in form in the 2009 season, taking him even further up the rankings to 19th in the world. Beaton won his first title in almost nine years when he took the Players Championship in Nuland in October. He also finished runner up in the European championship beating Adrian Lewis, Mark Walsh and James Wade en route to the final where he was defeated 11β3 by Phil Taylor. This result however gave Beaton a place in the 2009 Grand Slam of Darts, where he progressed from the round robin stage courtesy of wins over Co StompΓ© and Kevin McDine before being comprehensively outplayed by Simon Whitlock.
At the 2010 Grand Slam of Darts, Beaton produced a major upset by beating three-time defending champion Phil Taylor 16β14 in the quarter-finals, having trailed 9β13 and 11β14. Earlier in the week, Beaton had needed to defeat Paul Nicholson 5β3 or better at the round robin stage to stay in the tournament, and followed that up with a 10β6 win over Ted Hankey who had himself defeated Taylor in his group. Beaton was defeated by eventual champion Scott Waites 16β9 in the semi-final. Despite his good form in 2010 he was narrowly defeated in the first round of the 2011 PDC World Darts Championship by Mark Hylton eventually losing by 3 sets to 2. The following year, Beaton recovered from two sets and three match darts down against Magnus Caris to win 3β2, but was beaten by Simon Whitlock 1β4 in the second round.
In the rest of the major events in 2012, Beaton could not win more than one game in any of them with his best results being last 16 exits in the World Matchplay, World Grand Prix and Players Championship Finals. On the PDC Pro Tour he lost in the semi-finals of the second Players Championship in a deciding leg to Dave Chisnall and also reached two other quarter-finals.
At the 2013 World Championship, Beaton defeated qualifier Kyle Anderson 3β0, but was then beaten 4β2 by James Wade. After the tournament, he was ranked world number 28. He reached the quarter-finals of a PDC Pro Tour event for the first time in six months in April at the seventh UK Open Qualifier, but lost 6β3 to John Part. At the UK Open itself, he lost 9β5 to Joey Palfreyman in the third round. He lost in two consecutive semi-finals in European Tour events during the year. The first of these came at the Austrian Darts Open where he missed four match darts at double 16 against Mervyn King to be edged out 6β5. The other was at the German Darts Championship where he suffered a 6β4 defeat against Dave Chisnall. He then won the German Darts Masters as he dropped only four legs in his first four games before averaging 100 in a 6β3 victory over Simon Whitlock in the semi-finals. He played Mervyn King in the final and with Beaton leading 4β3, King incredibly burst his score when on 134 by hitting a treble 20 with his final dart instead of a single to leave 40. Beaton stepped in to hit a 160 finish and, though the match went to a deciding leg, he was first to a finish to close the match out 6β5 and seal his first title for almost four years. At the World Grand Prix he missed one dart for the match in the first round against James Wade to be narrowly beaten by two sets to one. Another semi-final followed at the 12th Players Championship by seeing off Gary Anderson in the quarters before losing 6β2 to Kim Huybrechts. His surge in form during the latter half of the year saw him finish eighth on the ProTour Order of Merit to qualify for the Players Championship Finals, where he came back from 3β1 and 5β3 down against Wade in the first round to win 6β5. However, he averaged 81.41 in his next match against Wes Newton and was beaten 9β3.
In the first round of the 2014 World Championship, Beaton missed four darts to move 2β0 up against Devon Petersen and was instead beaten 3β1. He lost 9β6 against Brendan Dolan in the third round of the UK Open. In June, Beaton won through to the final of the Gibraltar Darts Trophy, but he let a 4β1 lead turn into a 6β4 defeat against James Wade. He could not progress past the first round of the 2014 World Matchplay, the 2014 World Grand Prix, the 2014 European Championship or the 2014 Players Championship Finals.
In an exact reverse of their 2013 clash, Beaton was knocked out 3β0 by Kyle Anderson in the first round of the 2015 World Championship. He lost 9β5 to Peter Wright in the third round of the 2015 UK Open and the first round of both the 2015 World Matchplay and the 2015 World Grand Prix. Despite only winning one of his three group fixtures, Beaton qualified for the knockout stage of the Grand Slam on leg difference. He averaged almost 100 in the second round, but only had five attempts at a double as Michael van Gerwen averaged 109 in defeating Beaton 10β2.
Beaton lost 4β2 to Michael Smith in the second round of the 2016 World Championship. He played in his first final since 2014 at the sixth UK Open Qualifier and was beaten 6β2 by Van Gerwen. He also made the final of the 10th Players Championship event, but lost 6β2 to Dave Chisnall. Beaton got to the quarter-finals of the 2016 World Matchplay, which was his best performance since 2001, by defeating Jelle Klaasen 10β6 and Smith 11β7. He lost 16β13 to Gary Anderson after fighting back from 9β4 down to level the match at 12β12 before eventually succumbing to the two-time reigning world champion. After Beaton took the opening set with a 135 finish in the first round of the World Grand Prix, van Gerwen won six unanswered legs to win 2β1. He lost 6β4 to Jeffrey de Graaf in the first round of the Players Championship Finals.
Beaton failed to progress to the third round at the World Championship for the 12th year in a row when he was beaten 4β1 by James Wade in the second round of the 2017 event. In 2017, Beaton won the 13th players championship event of the year defeating Gary Anderson 6β3 in the final. In the Players Championship Finals, Beaton reached the quarter final by winning against Ronny Huybrechts, Jelle Klaasen and Jermaine Wattimena. In the quarter final, he lost 8β10 to Jonny Clayton.
2018
In the 2018 World Championship, Beaton won 3β1 in the first round against William O'Connor but was eliminated in the second round 0β4 by Vincent van der Voort.2024
Beaton announced in December 2023, that 2024 would be his final year playing professional darts, and that he would retire at the end of the year.At the 2024 PDC World Championship, his final World Championship appearance, Beaton won his first round game 3β1 against Wessel Nijman, but lost to Daryl Gurney 3β1 in the second round.
At his final UK Open event in 2024, Beaton reached the third round before losing there to Josh Payne 5β6.
Beaton qualified for a single European Tour event in the season at the 2024 German Darts Championship, where he suffered an early exit against Dylan Slevin in the first round 4β6 in legs.
Beaton received a standing ovation from everyone inside the venue at the Mattioli Arena when arriving for his last Pro Tour appearance ever. To celebrate the career of Beaton, fellow professional players on the circuit, Chris Dobey, Andy Boulton, Ross Smith, Nathan Aspinall, Joe Cullen, Adam Hunt, Ryan Joyce, Jonny Clayton, and John Henderson all dressed up as Beaton from when he used to play in the 1990s as a celebration for what he has accomplished for the sport. Beaton lost in the first round, losing in a deciding leg to Niels Zonneveld.
For the first time since his debut in 2003, Beaton failed to qualify for the 2025 PDC World Championship, having finished the season outside the top 32 on both the PDC Order of Merit ranking and the Pro Tour ranking, and not progressing through the Tour Card Holder Qualifier, meaning the 2024 event was his final professional world championship appearance.
2026
In 2026, Beaton took part in Q-School to try and regain his PDC tour card, but was unsuccessful.WSD career
Following his retirement from professional darts, Beaton accepted an invite to play at the 2025 World Seniors Darts Championship. He made it all the way to the semi-finals, before bowing out to the eventual winner, Ross Montgomery. He would suffer an early round exit at the 2025 World Seniors Champion of Champions to former BDO Women's World Champion, Trina Gulliver 5β2.Steve was scheduled to face Vincent van der Voort at the 2025 World Seniors Matchplay in November. However, the WSD announced that the tournament was cancelled, after the organisation folded in August.
MODUS career
Beaton has also competed in the MODUS Super Series after handing in his Tour Card. In 2025 he competed in Series 11-Week 11, where he lost in the final to Jurjen van der Velde. He also paired up with former back-to-back PDC World Champion Adrian Lewis, to represent England at the MODUS Super Series International Pairs tournament in 2025.Nickname
Beaton is currently introduced in the PDC as The Bronzed Adonis, a nickname derived from his tanned appearance. His appearance is maintained 12 months a year via his warm weather training camps in Playa de las AmΓ©ricas, Tenerife. His entrance music is "Stayin' Alive" by the Bee Gees. Most recently, Beaton has taken part in a number of marathons in order to keep fit and raise money for charity, and has been referred to as The Marathon Man as a result. Beaton was once also nicknamed Magnum P.I. due to his purported likeness of the actor Tom Selleck, who played the title role in the TV series.Personal life
Beaton currently resides in North Walsham, Norfolk, where he lives with his wife Nanette, whom he married in 1993.He is a fan of English football club Coventry City.
World Championship record
BDO
- 1992: First round
- 1993: Semi-finals
- 1994: First round
- 1995: First round
- 1996: Winner
- 1997: Semi-finals
- 1998: Quarter-finals
- 1999: First round
- 2000: Second round
- 2001: Second round
PDC
- 2002: Second round
- 2003: Second round
- 2004: Fourth round
- 2005: Third round
- 2006: First round
- 2007: Second round
- 2008: Second round
- 2009: First round
- 2010: Second round
- 2011: First round
- 2012: Second round
- 2013: Second round
- 2014: First round
- 2015: First round
- 2016: Second round
- 2017: Second round
- 2018: Second round
- 2019: Second round
- 2020: Fourth round
- 2021: First round
- 2022: Second round
- 2023: First round
- 2024: Second round
WSD
- 2025: Semi-finals
Performance timeline
Source:PDC
PDC European TourPDC Players Championships
Career finals
BDO and WDF major finals: 4 (2 titles)
| Legend |
| World Championship |
| World Masters |
| Zuiderduin Masters |
| Outcome | No. | Year | Championship | Opponent in the final | Score |
| Winner | 1. | 1993 | World Masters | ![]() |
