World Darts Championship finalist Gian van Veen gave a classy reaction to the Alexandra Palace boos he received on Friday night.Van Veen beat Gary Anderson 6-3 in the second semi-final of the showpiece tournament to set up a final meeting with Luke Littler tonight.Van Veen celebrates his 6-3 semi-final win over AndersonGettyIt means that, with a combined age of 41, Saturday’s final will be the youngest in history as Littler looks to become the first player since Anderson in 2016 to win back-to-back Sid Waddell trophies after a 6-1 demolition of Ryan Searle on Friday evening.‘The Nuke’ has become something of a ‘pantomime villain’ this year owing to his dominance, with the 18-year-old booed during his fourth-round win over Rob Cross.And Van Veen came in for similar treatment during his victory over Anderson on Friday night.The 23-year-old exclusively told talkSPORT that he was ‘annoyed’ at the treatment from the fans, but not with those in attendance.Van Veen ‘annoyed’“The crowd started getting involved, which didn’t help me as everyone saw,” Van Veen told talkSPORT after his win over Anderson.“It shouldn’t have. I felt a bit annoyed, not with the crowd, but with myself that it affected me so much in my biggest game of my career so far.“In my head I was like ‘you could lose it due to the crowd because you’re so annoyed’. I let it affect my game too much. I missed a couple of darts at the double to win sets because of the crowd.“You heard it from the get-go, everyone’s singing Gary Anderson because Gary Anderson is a legend of the game. He’s a fantastic darts player. He showed it this whole tournament.”Van Veen also revealed he ‘understands the crowd’ for backing for the Scottish darts star, and that he himself is an Anderson fan.Gian van Veen shakes hands with Gary Anderson after victory in their semi-final match.“Myself, I’m a Gary Anderson fan, so if it was him playing someone else, I would want Gary to win. But tonight, I didn’t want him to win, of course,” Van Veen admitted.“I understand the crowd, but I’m so happy that I got the job done in the end.”‘If I win tonight, I’ll see you tomorrow’Van Veen also revealed that his ‘whole family’ is in London to watch as the youngster looks to win his first championship.When asked who from his family is here, Van Veen said: “My whole family is here. My sister, my younger brother is here. My girlfriend and her parents are here.”However, the Dutchman added that the final against Littler will be the first time his parents have made the trip to the Ally Pally to watch him in action.Van Veen’s parents will be in attendance for Saturday’s final“Tomorrow my parents are coming for the first time in the World Championship. They haven’t been here the whole tournament,” he added.“I said to them before the tournament ‘If I make the final, you can come’. They like darts so much but my mother is very nervous when I’m playing.“That’s why I always say to her ‘Don’t come too much’ because it’s your mother, you’re always watching out for her and if you see she’s nervous, then I’m not playing so well.“So, I said to them this morning ‘If I win tonight, I’ll see you tomorrow.”What time does the final start?The PDC World Championship final takes place on Friday, 3rd January between Little and Van Veen.You can listen to it live on talkSPORT.Coverage begins at 8pm, with the action scheduled to get underway at 8:15pm.