
Luke Littler raring to go and confident of success at Australian Darts Masters
The teenager consolidated his position at the top of the game with victory at the World Matchplay in July, completing a hat-trick of prestigious titles alongside the 2025 World Championship and Premier League in 2024.
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He was runner-up to Gerwyn Price at this event last year and is confident of going one better this time around.
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'I've been here a few days now, so I've settled in but once Friday night comes, we're in the venue and the crowd are pumping, it will definitely get me up for it,' he said ahead of the tournament in Wollongong.
'Once you are runner-up you want to come back the next year and win it. It's a long time but now we are here and coming off the back of the Matchplay win, I am feeling very confident and up for the task.
'I got tested in Blackpool and I definitely made a good 10 days of it. Happy to come out with the win and claim the Triple Crown but now we're Down Under, it's a different competition and a different mindset.'
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Littler will open his campaign against New Zealand's Haupai Puha as eight PDC stars take on Oceanic players.
World number one Luke Humphries is up against Jonny Tata while defending champion Price takes on Joe Comito.
Josh Rock, a beaten semi-finalist in Blackpool, makes his World Series debut and has a tough opener against home favourite Simon Whitlock.
The opening session of the 2025
@KenoGO_au
Australian Darts Masters...
All gets underway at 1900 AEST on Friday August 8 here in Wollongong!
pic.twitter.com/Zd4CjpQXrN
— PDC Darts (@OfficialPDC)
August 7, 2025
Rock has taken his game to new levels this year, including a World Cup win with fellow Northern Irishman Daryl Gurney in June, but he says does not yet class himself as one of the game's elite players.
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'Not just yet,' he said 'The Premier League is the aim for next year if not then the year after, then I'll class myself as an elite player.
'My game has been in a very good place all year, if I keep playing well I can see myself going up higher in the ratings.
'It will obviously be fantastic to win, if you're going to put your name on the World Series why not do it at the first try?'
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Daily Mirror
2 hours ago
- Daily Mirror
Luke Littler gives heckling verdict and bold claim after Australian Darts Masters win
Luke Littler says this is the most confident he's felt in a long time after winning the Australian Darts Masters and the World Matchplay in the last month, with the Brit building up some superb form after a brief five-month gap without any silverware to his name Darts star Luke Littler was on cloud nine as he headed for the land of the long white cloud, warning: "I've got that winning feeling back." After backing up his triumph at the World Matchplay last month with a World Series title at the Australian Darts Masters, Luke the Nuke is close to his imperious best. And following a five-month gap on his trophy rampage between the UK Open and a series of breathtaking comeback wins in Blackpool, Littler's renewed scoring power looks like giving him first dibs at the maiden £1 million prize jackpot in darts. Littler, 18, heads for Friday's New Zealand Darts Masters already installed as heavy favourite to retain his PDC World Championship crown at Alexandra Palace in December, where the Sid Waddell Trophy comes with the sport's first seven-figure payday. His Nukeship was feeding kangaroos and cuddling koalas with girlfriend Faith Millar in Sydney - but four months out, it's already clear he will be the beast to tame at Ally Pally. Littler said: "Other players go through these spells, but as a world champion you need to be winning things, and it took five months to taste that winning feeling again. "But winning the World Matchplay meant everything to me and now, to back it up in Australia, I've got that winning feeling back in me. It's a different feeling when you are world champion, but winning gives you confidence - and this is the most confident I've felt in a very long time. "After travelling all this way I wanted to win, especially after falling short in the final last year (when he was thrashed 8-1 by Gerwyn Price). Losing any final always motivates you and makes you want to come back and go one step further." Once he had shaken off the jetlag, Littler looked in command as he conquered Oz by beating home favourite Damon Heta, Stephen Bunting and then Mike De Decker 8-4 in the final. He was noticeably more at ease with any heckling among the crowd - a distraction he had found difficult to overcome in Germany at the World Cup of Darts and an earlier European Tour event in Munich. Littler said: "The first time I hear something I might react, but then I'll just let it go and hopefully allow my darts to do the talking. Someone in the crowd here said I'm 'washed' - I'm not sure exactly what he meant by that, but this (trophy) is my response. "No-one has been teaching me how to deal with it (heckling). When you're on that stage, you're alone and no-one else is with you, no-one else is going to help you. You've just got to get on with it. "I was trailing in most games at the World Matchplay but I managed to dig myself out, but I was in the lead a few times here and felt very comfortable."


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The Guardian
3 hours ago
- The Guardian
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