Luke Littler vs Michael van Gerwen – World Darts Championship: Live score and leg-by-leg updates as teenage sensation sets his sights on first world title as he comes up against three-time champion
Follow Mail Sport’s live blog for the latest scores and leg-by-leg updates from final night of the 2025 PDC World Championship as teenage sensation Luke Littler comes up against three-time champion Michael van Gerwen at Alexandra Palace.
MvG at Littler’s age
Littler would become the youngest-ever world champion if he wins tonight. Are you surprised?
As aforementioned, MvG holds the record, winning it when he was 24.
Have you ever wondered what he looked like when he was Littler’s age? Of course you have. Click here or below to find out.
MvG’s title history
He hasn’t had success on this stage since 2019, so people do forget quite how good MvG was in his hayday.
He is the youngest ever world champion, winning it at 24 in 2014. He then lifted the title in 2017 and 2019, too. The Green Machine was the man who dethroned Phil Taylor, really.
I do wonder how he feels about the attention not being on him tonight and being the underdog.
Get your merch now!
Half-and-half scarves at darts, anyone?
Anything for a quick buck, I suppose.
Wonder what they’re going for.
‘The most popular sports star in Britain’
If Littler wins this evening, does it elevate him to the most popular sports star in Britain? Despite football’s stranglehold on opinion, I think it does.
Dawson: ‘He should not be doing what he’s doing’
He is a freakish talent. He should not be able to do what he is doing having just arrived on the scene.
To reach the final in his first two… he could be world champion tonight.
Behind the scenes
This is quite cool. A look at where the players go in their breaks.
There will be a few tonight, including early doors after the first and second sets. For the players to gather their thoughts.
And this is where they will go! Unless, of course, they opt to stay on the stage.
Who will be in the Premier League?
The eight names will be revealed on Monday. Eight people who will tour the UK and in some cases Europe in the bid to be crowned champion. Littler won it last year…
There’s been some debate over whether this post on X has the silhouettes of the actual players. I’m not sure.
I think Littler, MvG, Humphries and Bunting are nailed. Cross probably too.
As for the other three, I’m not sure. The likes of Damon Heta, Dobey, Gerwyn Price, Nathan Aspinall and maybe other are all contenders.
Stam: ‘Hopefully he can show the world what he is capable of’
Jaap Stam, former Manchester United defender, speaking toSportsLens:
It would be a real shame if Michael van Gerwen doesn’t win another world title before he retires, but we know he’s not in the best position in terms of his form.
But in these tournaments we know that anything can happen and hopefully he can grow into it, hopefully for the Dutch public we can see him achieve it one more time before he decides that he’s had enough.
There are so many good players in darts that keeping that highest standard is difficult in every tournament and as a sportsperson you have to have the belief that you can win the trophy.
I’m sure he has that belief and hopefully he can again show the world what he is capable of.
‘A smorgasbord of silliness’
By Kieran Gill At Alexandra Palace
Alexandra Palace is a smorgasbord of silliness – I’ve just been for a wander through the main hall and my favourite costume thus far is the group of lads dressed as the Liverpool Spice Boys.
You’re spoilt for choice, mind. Pingus, nuns, Cookie Monster, Pikachu. Willy Wonka complete with his wife, an Oompa Loompa. What a sport, eh.
The prize money up for grabs
A closer look at the prize money on offer tonight…
Winner: £500,000
Runner-up: £200,000
Semis: £100,000
Quarters: £50,000
Fourth round: £35,000
Third round: £25,000
Second round: £15,000
First round: £7,500
This time last year, Eloise Milburn was in Littler’s corner every night, alongside his parents. It was the talk of the town given the age gap of more than four years, but she was there to support him nonetheless.
They broke up in mid-2024, with Littler asking fans to respect their privacy.Does, though, the Nuke have a new girlfriend? He seemed to be caught out late last year when streaming with Angry Ginge and a female voice was heard speaking down Littler’s microphone.
If it is indeed a girlfriend or love interest, she has definitely been kept out the limelight. And a relationship expert has detailed why.
And here’s Littler’s run. The one Van Gerwen has declared has been oh so easy.
He was seeded at four, straight into the second round where he clashed with Ryan Meikle. He was comfortable enough, emerging the 3-1 victor, but broke down into tears afterwards. He criticised his performance after, but had that first game out of the way that carried so much hope and expectation.
The 17-year-old then hit his stride. Ian White posed a challenge, in fine form, and Littler dispatched of him 4-1. He then really had to turn up against Ryan Joyce, who is so clinical on the outer ring that it’s a joke.Littler though averaged over 103, throwing 14 180s and withstanding the most pressure he had faced to date.
That took us to the quarters, where he faced Aspinall, who, in truth, was never really in the game. Littler won 5-2, again averaging over 101 and hitting more than 45 per cent of his doubles.
Then he beat Bunting, and has one final mammoth clash tonight.
MvG’s route to the final
Van Gerwen has had a lot to say about Littler’s run to the final. So let’s take a look at his.
Seeded third, he of course received a bye in the first round, before drawing James Hurrell in the second round. The Englishman was absolutely no match for the Green Machine, falling to a 3-0 defeat.
After that, it was Brendan Dolan, who put up much more of a fight and averaged over 96 with over 42 per cent success on the doubles.
It was a strong showing from the Northern Irishman, but, as it goes with set play, he didn’t win his legs at the right time and fell to a 4-2 defeat. Another one bites the dust.
Surprise package Jeffrey de Graaf was up next and no competition for Van Gerwen, who was starting to hit his stride and averaged nearly 102. He won 4-2, setting up a quarter-final clash with Callan Rydz.
For me, this was game of the tournament. I really fancied Rydz to win, and he averaged 103.88, smashing in 17 180s and plugging 46.15 per cent of his doubles. That was a game Rydz would have won on legs, but, again, because of set play, MvG came through it.
Not that he was poor – averaging over 103 and logging 14 180s of his own. He had to shine to win.
That took us to last night. When he dismantled Dobey. One more to go…
The best leg of darts of all time
We can’t speak about a World Darts Championship final without mentioning this from two years ago.
It feels mental that it was that long ago!Michael Smith, Michael van Gerwen. Both players on nine-darters. Van Gerwen missed, Smith hit. The best leg of darts of all time. I can’t spake.
Will we see another nine tonight? We’ve had two so far this tournament. Yes please.
A photo that tells a thousand words
What a fantastic photo.This is being billed as the prodigy vs the grand master.
Not sure I like that analogy. Sure, Van Gerwen has had the best career of anyone who is still going. He is, overall, the very best, and probably the second best player of all time. But if Littler a prodigy? By age or whatever, sure. But he is now a serial winner in his own right.
Anyway, what a match it promises to be. Would love to see these two have a legit chess match.
Bray: ‘I think MvG wins’
Russ Bray, speaking to Mail Sport:
Littler has still got growing to do. He’s still only a boy, only a kid, becomes an adult properly in a few weeks’ time. We’ll see how good Luke is in the next couple of years because everything’s new, he’s not defending any money within the circuit. So let’s see what happens after that, because I’m sure he’ll have a different pressure.
He’s got a different pressure this year in the World Championships because everyone’s expecting it. So it’s a different ball game. But he’s more than capable of winning the World Championship, absolutely no two ways about it.
Van Gerwen was the nearest thing to Littler when he was 17. I called a nine-darter for him against Barney [Raymond van Barneveld] in front of four or 5,000 people in the Netherlands when he was 17 years of age. Incredible. There’s a young lad in India who’s only 14. He’s their national champion. He’s a bit tidy. He’s a bit tasty.
I think MvG wins 7-4. He is hitting form and confidence at the right time, also he knows how to win this tournament, having done so three times previous, that may just be the key to him taking the title. But Littler is a class act and to be fair, that 7-4 could be either way.
Russ Bray’s views
My colleague, Sam Lawley, had the pleasure of speaking to legendary referee Russ Bray ahead of tonight. What a bloke.
Bray retired after last year’s Worlds after years and years of service to the game. Even if you don’t follow darts too closely, you will be familiar with his iconic ‘180’.
Here’s a social clip we filmed with him playing winner stays on when he cause up with him before the tournament started.
He has also got a book out. It’s called ‘All About Darts’ – well worth a buy if you haven’t checked it out yet.
The prize on offer
This is what they are playing for tonight.
It must be nearly as tall as Littler.
So far this competition, it’s all been a bit pally pally when it comes to Littler. During his wins over Nathan Aspinall and Bunting in particular, he was joking, laughing, fist bumping his opponents left, right and centre.
I noticed a bit of criticism of that on social media last night, but I can promise you there will be absolutely none of that tonight. Not MvG’s style.
The mind games began as early as last night in Van Gerwen’s post-match presser, before Littler had even won his game.
He wrote off Littler’s run to this point, while also biting back at one reporter: ‘Don’t ask those silly questions, right? Of course, I’m the favourite.’
Van Gerwen’s numbers didn’t quite match up to Littler’s, but he too was dominant as he dispatched of Chris Dobey by the same score.
A 98.84 average, eight 180s and looking like the Van Gerwen of old on the back of what has been a really poor year for him. Like I say, though, that won’t matter if he wins tonight.
‘I’ve won f*** all yet,’ he told Sky Sports last night. It’s true. There is one very sizeable hurdle left to overcome tonight.
Littler storms into final
Littler was tipped to get the job done against Stephen Bunting last night, but not in quite as dominant fashion as he did.
The teenager was at his very best, averaging 105.48, throwing 13 180s and hitting 44.19 per cent of his doubles.
It’s not like Bunting was bad. He too averages over 100, but he couldn’t get near Littler, losing 6-1 and merely playing a part in his opponent’s sensational journey.
Littler is ready. It is his destiny to be world champion.
Littler’s sensational 12 months
What a year for Littler. Be honest, before last year’s Worlds, how many of you knew who he was?
He was just 16 when he debuted in last year’s tournament. And he just kept winning. From being a bit of a cheeky chap, so to speak, on stage, he took out the likes of Andrew Gilding and Matt Campbell before taking on his childhood hero, Roman van Barneveld.
No issue there either. Just a 4-1 win over a four-time world champion.
The run continued as he beat both Brendan Dolan and Rob Cross, before facing the man who would become his arch rival, Luke Humphries in the final.
He was on top, missing double 2 to go 5-2 up. But he didn’t and Humphries showed his class by coming back to claim victory. But a star was born.
Since then, he has become truly famous, starring on shows like the Jonathan Ross show, Bullseye, and Game of Throws.
There are, though, darts to be thrown. and there’s a job to do tonight.
This is how the two men – well, man and boy – compare ahead of tonight.
It’s no secret that Van Gerwen is much, much more experienced. He has 47 major career titles to Littler’s three. But, this tournament, Littler has more 180s and a higher average – he’s a bit of a maximum machine.
We’ve also had a look at who they support, their routes to the final, and their partners. Click here or below to get the full tale of the tape.
A clash of two titans
Van Gerwen is looking to win his fourth world title. For Littler, it would be his first, but he is just 17 – in case you hadn’t heard.
The Dutchman is a winning machine, but has not been as his best this year. He has won pretty much nothing – but that could all change tonight and he won’t care one jot if he’s the one lifting the trophy in a few hours.
It is indeed the Sid Waddell trophy they are playing for tonight, named after the legendary commentator. But it’s also the right to be named the world’s best, even though neither man will be able to leapfrog Luke Humphries with a win tonight.
And there is also the small matter of £500,000 on the line.
Luke Littler’s time to shine
Good evening one and all and welcome. It’s the big one – Luke Littler vs Michael van Gerwen in the final of the World Darts Championship.
I cannot wait. As soon as defending champion Luke Humphries went out, it was the final everyone wanted, and it’s the final everyone is getting.
The teenage prodigy turned world beater up against one of the best sportspeople in the planet and that the sport of darts has ever seen. No time for sentiment. For poetic endings. If Littler wants to win this thing, he is going to have to earn it. But he knows that, and he know what he is up against.
Play is expected to get underway at around 7:40. So strap in and get ready for what could be an absolute classic.
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Luke Littler vs Michael van Gerwen – World Darts Championship: Live score and leg-by-leg updates as teenage sensation sets his sights on first world title as he comes up against three-time champion