• 16-year-old sensation beats Cross 6-2 in the semi-final
  • Littler to face Scott Williams or Luke Humphries on Wednesday

Now we know for sure. And perhaps on some level we always suspected it, from the moment a 16-year-old kid arrived at these championships on a wave of froth and hype and good tidings and started doing whatever he wanted. Everyone who has ever seen Luke Littler throw a dart, from Phil Taylor to his hapless beaten opponents at junior level, will have told you that this was the next giant of the sport. But some time in the future. Not right now. Surely not now.

But at half past nine on the second evening of 2024, the future spectacularly and violently morphed into the present. On Wednesday evening, Littler will play Luke Humphries or Scott Williams in the final of the Professional Darts Corporation world championship, and it feels inevitable, and it feels like something from an entirely different reality. Rob Cross, the former world champion, was his strongest opponent by far, the first top-10 player he had faced all tournament, the first man to really push Littler to his outer limits. And in the end he was destroyed like all the others, the score 6-2 in sets, Cross leaving the arena with nothing but a decent cheque and a funny story to tell the grandchildren.

Continue reading…

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

You May Also Like

I’ve lived in Britain 22 years and have kids here – why am I being deported to Jamaica? | Mark Nelson

On Wednesday, I will be put on a Home Office flight, torn…

Australia thrash England by 275 runs in second Ashes Test to take 2-0 series lead

Australia 473-9 dec & 230-9 dec; England 236 & 192 Buttler leads…

I am a virgin at 26, and I worry future partners will scorn me

You sound sensitive and courageous, says Annalisa Barbieri. Take it slow and…

UK Covid live news: four-fold expansion in daily testing centres for workers in England’s ‘frontline sectors’

Latest updates: expansion sees another 1,200 testing sites set up in England…