4 Jan 2025

Darts: Luke 'The Nuke' Littler downs Van Gerwen 7-3 to become youngest champ

12:06 pm on 4 January 2025
England's Luke Littler celebrates winning the fourth set against Netherlands' Michael van Gerwen during the PDC World Darts Championship final, at Alexandra Palace in London on January 3, 2025. (Photo by Ben STANSALL / AFP)

Luke Littler celebrates winning the fourth set against Netherlands' Michael van Gerwen during the PDC World Darts Championship final. Photo: AFP / BEN STANSALL

Seventeen-year-old sensation Luke 'The Nuke' Littler thrashed Michael van Gerwen 7-3 on Friday to become the youngest ever PDC darts world champion and bank a 500,000 pound (NZ$1.11 million) winner's cheque.

The duel for the biggest prize on the board, in front of 3,200 rowdy fans in fancy dress, ended in a crushing defeat for three times winner Van Gerwen in his seventh final at North London's Alexandra Palace.

"I can't believe it. Honestly, I can't believe it," gasped Littler, who started throwing darts as a toddler, at a dream come true.

"We both played so well. I said in my interviews, I needed to get off to a quick start and that's what I did.

"Everyone dreams of lifting this trophy but you have to get through a tough field."

Littler took a cagey opening set, neither finalist on their A game, and then found his rhythm with two quick 180s to go 2-0 up as Van Gerwen grimaced in frustration.

Van Gerwen, who will walk away 200,000 pounds (NZ$444,200) richer as runner-up, won the opening leg of the third set but it proved a false dawn as an implacable Littler then raced 4-0 clear with a bullseye finish.

The Dutch 35-year-old, who set the previous record for youngest world champion as a 24-year-old in 2014, showed he was still in the fight by taking the fifth set but the comeback then faltered.

Littler, hand steady and gaze unwavering, fired in quick back-to-back 180s to take the opening leg of the sixth and then banged in two more maximum scores to secure the set and forge 5-1 up.

Van Gerwen raised his game to pull back to 5-2 but Littler whitewashed the next set to restore his advantage to 6-2.

Another set to the Dutchman only postponed the inevitable as Littler romped through the final set to get his hands on the mighty Sid Waddell Trophy, with the pent-up emotion finally released.

"I come 4-0 behind and after that I didn't do myself justice but that's the way it is," said Van Gerwen.

"I sometimes say every 17 years a star gets born and he's one of them."

- Reuters

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