Leo Maddix
| Leo Maddix | |
|---|---|
Maddix at the 2039 South Pacific Darts Masters | |
| Personal information | |
| Nickname | "The Prodigy" |
| Born | June 11, 2024 Birmingham, England |
| Home town | Birmingham |
| Darts information | |
| Playing darts since | 2039 |
| Darts | 21g Unicorn Prototype |
| Laterality | Right-handed |
| Walk-on music | TBD |
| Organisation (see split in darts) | |
| Current world ranking | Unranked (as of 2026) |
Leo Maddix (born 11 June 2024) is an English professional darts player who competes in Open Darts Federation (ODF) events. He is the 2041 Grand Prix champion and 2042 Premier League winner, and is currently ranked world number two. Maddix made his professional debut in 2039 at the age of 14, becoming the youngest player in ODF history to compete in a sanctioned event. He has since won 29 career titles.
Widely regarded as the most promising darts talent of the modern era, Maddix is known for his fast rhythm, explosive scoring, and relentless precision on doubles. As of the end of 2042, he holds the record for most Players Tour titles in a single season (12), is the youngest Premier League champion in history, and became the youngest player to reach both the World Championship quarter-finals and final. He also led the global circuit in three-dart average for two consecutive seasons and has finished each year inside the world’s top three since 2041.
Maddix began playing darts at age 9 and turned professional in 2039. He made his televised debut at the 2040 ODF World Championship, where he reached the quarter-finals in his first appearance. Later that year, he was selected for the 2040 Premier League, becoming the youngest player ever to compete in the event. Trained by six-time world champion Elias Storm, Maddix has since become a central figure of darts’ next generation, with many tipping him as a future multi-time world champion.
Early life
Maddix was born in Birmingham, England in 2024. He began playing darts competitively at the age of nine and quickly rose through the youth ranks, winning the 2037 UK Junior Masters and the 2038 European Youth Grand Prix. His smooth mechanics and maturity at the oche drew comparisons to a young Elias Storm, and by age 13, he was regularly training with senior professionals and appearing in exhibition events. His breakthrough came in early 2039 when he was granted a wildcard entry to Players Tour 2, marking his first official match on the ODF circuit.
Career
2040
After a headline-grabbing debut season in 2039, Maddix entered 2040 with growing expectations. Still just 15 years old, Maddix had already reached one Players Tour final and averaged over 100 in multiple matches during his rookie campaign. With ODF age restrictions lifted for the 2040 season, he became eligible to compete in televised majors for the first time—most notably, the ODF World Championship. Maddix trained extensively in the off-season under six-time world champion Elias Storm, who described him as “the most naturally gifted player I’ve seen since Steel.”
Maddix qualified for the World Championship via the Players Tour Order of Merit, earning the 28th seed. In his debut match, he faced Dutch qualifier Lars Verhoeven and won 3–1, showing off his elite scoring power with four 180s and a 130 checkout. In the second round, he pulled off an upset against the 5th seed Victor Linz, winning 4–2 and averaging 99.3. The performance sparked headlines across the darts world, with commentators noting his poise, tempo, and “Storm-like” body language at the oche.
In the third round, Maddix faced fellow teenager and world No. 12 Declan Farrow in a battle that was marketed as the “Future Final.” Maddix edged a nervy 4–3 win, surviving five missed match darts from Farrow and taking the final leg with a 90 finish under pressure. The result made Maddix the youngest player in history to reach the quarter-finals of the World Championship, breaking a record previously held by Ethan Steel. Storm, watching from the crowd, was seen smiling—a rare public display from the usually reserved champion.
Maddix’s run came to an end in the quarter-finals, where he lost 5–2 to world No. 1 Jamie Veyna. Despite the scoreline, Maddix pushed Veyna in nearly every set, forcing multiple deciders and averaging 97.4 in the match. His temperament and consistency drew praise from across the tour, with Veyna himself saying, “Leo is terrifying. Not just because he’s good—but because he’s this good, this young.”
Following the World Championship, Maddix jumped to No. 21 in the ODF world rankings and was confirmed as a participant in the 2040 ODF Premier League Darts—making him the youngest player in the event’s history at 15 years and 9 months old. Storm publicly endorsed the selection, saying, “It’s not a gamble. He’s ready.” Maddix also signed his first professional sponsorship deal with Target Darts, who unveiled a custom “Prodigy Edition” dart modeled after Storm’s signature set.
By the end of the season, Maddix had reached two more Players Tour semi-finals and made the final of the South Pacific Darts Masters, finishing the year with a three-dart average of 96.7 across all ranked events.
2041
Following his sensational quarter-final run at the 2040 World Championship and historic Premier League selection, Maddix entered 2041 with rising expectations—but few predicted the dominance that would follow. At just 16 years old, Maddix delivered one of the greatest single seasons in modern darts history, claiming his first televised major title and winning a record-setting 12 Players Tour events in the same calendar year.
Maddix began the year with immediate success, reaching the final of the first Players Tour event and winning back-to-back titles in Tour Events 2 and 3. His Premier League campaign started unevenly but steadily improved, with Maddix winning Nights 6, 9, and 13. He finished third in the league standings and defeated Declan Farrow 10–8 in the semi-finals before falling to Jamie Veyna 18–15 in a high-quality final. His three-dart average of 100.3 across the tournament was the second-highest in the field.
His career-defining moment came in July at the 2041 ODF Grand Prix, where Maddix won his first major televised title. En route to the trophy, he defeated Victor Linz, Cal Derwent, and Ethan Steel, before overpowering Jeroen Klausen 5–2 in the final with a 105.6 average and 50% on doubles. At 17 years and 1 month old, Maddix became the youngest major champion in ODF history, eclipsing the previous record held by Steel.
Throughout the season, Maddix maintained an astonishing level of consistency on the floor circuit. He reached 16 Players Tour finals, winning 12 of them—a single-season record. Among his highlights were victories over top-10 players in seven finals, including back-to-back wins over Steel and Derwent in Events 10 and 11. His performance across the year earned him the 2041 Players Tour Order of Merit title by an unprecedented margin.
By the end of the season, Maddix’s world ranking had soared to No. 3, behind only Veyna and Steel. His seasonal three-dart average of 99.6 led all ranked players, and he topped the tour in 180s, legs under 15 darts, and break percentage. At just 17 years old, Maddix had already transitioned from prodigy to contender—cementing his place among the sport’s elite.
Maddix closed the year with 13 title wins in 2041 alone (1 major, 12 tour), bringing his career total to 16 titles across all competitions. With his first major secured, and his youth still ahead of him, many began to wonder whether Maddix wasn’t just the future of darts—but the sport’s next dominant era, already in motion.
2042
After a historic 2041 campaign, Maddix entered 2042 as a top-three ranked player and a clear favorite to contend for every major trophy. At just 17 years old, he already held the record for most Players Tour titles in a season and had lifted his first major. Now, the focus shifted toward two goals: winning his first World Championship and adding the Premier League crown to his résumé. With momentum, poise, and a deepening level of matchplay maturity, Maddix didn’t just chase greatness—he ran straight at it.
At the 2042 ODF World Championship, Maddix was seeded third and opened his campaign with dominant wins over Bartosz Klink and Samuel Donnelly, dropping just one set across the two matches. In the third round, he survived a scare against Victor Linz, edging out a 4–3 win with a 104.5 average and two 12-darters in the final set. In the quarter-finals, Maddix defeated Jeroen Klausen 5–1 in a clinical display before dismantling Cal Derwent 6–2 in the semi-final. The win set up a blockbuster final against world number one Jamie Veyna.
The final was instantly hailed as one of the greatest matches in tournament history. Maddix and Veyna traded blows through ten high-quality sets, with both players averaging above 102 and landing multiple ton-plus checkouts. Maddix held a 5–4 lead but was unable to close the match in the tenth set, missing one dart at double 16 for the title. Veyna rallied in the final frame and eventually secured the championship 7–6. Though disappointed, Maddix was praised for his composure in defeat and for pushing one of the sport’s modern greats to the limit on the biggest stage.
Just three months later, Maddix earned his redemption. At the 2042 ODF Premier League Darts, he finished top of the league table with nine nightly wins, including a 110.2 average in Night 14—his career-high in a televised match. In the playoffs, he defeated Ethan Steel 10–7 in the semi-final before facing Veyna once again in the final. This time, Maddix made no mistake. He closed out an 18–15 win with a 121 bullseye checkout, lifting his second major and becoming the youngest player to ever win the Premier League title.
Throughout the year, Maddix added ten more Players Tour titles to his record, winning Events 3 through 6 in a streak that matched his previous season’s form. He also reached the final of the South Pacific Darts Masters and the semi-finals of the Grand Prix. By the end of the year, he had led the tour in seasonal average (100.1), 180s, and break percentage for the second year running. With a world final appearance, Premier League crown, and more floor dominance, Maddix firmly established himself as the sport’s defining young force.
As the 2042 season concluded, Maddix rose to a career-high world number two and brought his total career title count to 29—including 2 majors, 27 other ranked titles, and a World Championship runner-up medal. Still just 18 years old, he had already played in two major finals, lifted the sport’s most prestigious league title, and continued to draw comparisons to the early careers of Elias Storm and Michael van Gerwen. For many, the question was no longer if Maddix would become world champion—but how soon.
Playing style
Maddix is known for his fast, fluid throw and fearless approach to high-pressure moments. He rarely shows emotion on stage and plays with a tempo that unsettles many older opponents. While still refining his finishing percentages, his scoring bursts—particularly on treble 20—have already made headlines, with multiple 180-heavy performances in his first months as a professional. Analysts have praised his balance of aggression and poise, especially for a player of his age.