The Warrington 17-year-old booked his place in a second successive PDC World Darts Championship Final at Alexandra Palace by thumping Stephen Bunting in the last four to set up a monumental clash with Michael van Gerwen. But the Dutchman, who beat Chris Dobey in the semi-finals by the same 6-1 scoreline, has warned the teenager he is ready to take his dream away from him. Tonight’s final promises to be the hottest ticket in town as the two biggest names in the sport go head-to-head for the Sid Waddell Trophy.
Victory for Littler would cap a stunning 12 months at the oche and cement his position at the top of the sport, having finished second in the BBC Sports Personality of the Year and being the most Googled UK sportsperson of 2024. “Everyone else is looking forward to it more than I am, but if I win seven sets I will be happy,” said Littler, who lost 7-4 to Luke Humphries as a debutant finalist last year. Luke Littler celebrating his World Darts Championship semi-final success against Stephen Bunting (Image: PDC) “Michael has been in numerous finals, this is my second, I know where I went wrong last year and I am sure I will fix it.
“It will mean everything, if I win seven sets I’ll be over the moon. I can’t wait to get on stage. “It’s the stuff of dreams, everyone wants to pick up a trophy, but you have to be at the top of your game to do it.
“I can tell you now, I have got no pressure, I am going to enjoy it, if I can get off to a quick start I’ll be happy.” Littler’s stunning emergence has knocked Van Gerwen off his perch as the biggest name in darts and the pair have a tense rivalry, with six wins apiece. The Dutchman has flown under the radar over the past year with all the attention on Littler, but he has a shot at winning a fourth title in what will be his seventh showpiece match at Ally Pally.
Most neutral observers will be backing a Littler triumph, but Van Gerwen is ready to take the teenager’s dream away from him. “I have been there before, the smell is not good enough, you want to touch it,” he said. “Luke’s been there, he has had a sniff.
I am going to make sure he keeps it as just a sniff as well. “I was the favourite two years ago and lost. Now I’m not favourite, and maybe I’m going to win it.
You never know.” Michael van Gerwen celebrates defeating Chris Dobey in the semi-finals last night (Image: Kieran Cleeves/PDC).
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What Littler and Van Gerwen are saying ahead of tonight's spectacular showdown
Luke Littler says it will be the “stuff dreams are made of” if he can create history by becoming the youngest-ever world champion