Krzysztof Kciuk is a successful Polish darts player who has represented Poland in various international tournaments. He won the national qualification for the
2010 PDC World Darts Championship in 2009 and played in the first
PDC World Cup of Darts in history with
Krzysztof Ratajski in the same year. Kciuk reached the quarter-finals at the Polish Open in 2017 and almost qualified for the
2018 PDC World Darts Championship, but lost in the final of the Eastern Europe Qualifier. He won the Polish Championship in 2018 and played in the
2019 BDO World Darts Championship. Kciuk won a two-year
PDC Tour Card in 2020 and has since played in several tournaments, including the PDC World Cup of Darts with Ratajski in 2020 and 2021. At the
2021 UK Open, he won his first match but was eliminated in the second round. Kciuk lost his PDC Pro Tour card at the end of 2021 after not achieving good results but regained it for the next two years by winning the last
PDC European Q-School tournament in January 2022. He played in the
2022 International Darts Open in February and reached the second round, where he lost to
Jonny Clayton. At the
2022 UK Open, he made it to the fourth round before losing to
Ron Meulenkamp. In May 2022, Kciuk won his opening game against
Keane Barry at the
2022 European Darts Open but lost in the second round to
Ryan Searle. He qualified for the 2022 Gibraltar Darts Trophy but withdrew for unknown reasons. Based on his performance throughout the 2023 season, especially his strong performance at the
PDC Players Championship tournaments, Kciuk received a qualifier for the
2023 PDC World Cup of Darts and for the fifth-time he represented
Poland together with
Krzysztof Ratajski. On the first day of the tournament, the Poles defeated the
Portuguese team (
Jose de Sousa and
Luis Ameixa) with some difficulty by 4–3 in legs. In the second match of the group stage, the Poles faced the
Lithuanian national team (
Darius Labanauskas and
Mindaugas Barauskas). After a great match, the Poles defeated their rivals by 4–1 in legs, achieving the world record match average (118.10) of doubles matches. ==Personal life==