
‘The sport is in good hands' – Adrian Lewis names Luke Littler as one of three stars to take darts forward
Littler, 18, heads Down Under this week to take part in World Series of Darts events in Australia and New Zealand.
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His last appearance on the oche saw him lift the Betfred World Matchplay – beating James Wade 18-13 in the final in Blackpool to complete the sport's Triple Crown.
In the semi-finals, The Nuke hit a stunning nine-darter against Josh Rock and instead of going wild at the feat, he simply shrugged his shoulders.
Almost like Lewis, 40, used to do after perfect legs, as if to say: 'Well, what else do you expect from someone as talented as me?'
When the tournament was over, Littler had hit 64 180s across five games, eight more maximums than the previous record of 56 set by Jackpot in 2013.
Far from feeling angry or jealous, Lewis approves of the audacity of Littler's antics, saying: 'I love it. Anything like that, I think it's great for the game, you need characters.
'I have said it for years, I do believe that, and Luke is certainly one of them.
'First of all, him reaching the world final on his first appearance at Ally Pally was unbelievable.
'To do what he has done since, becoming world champion and still maintaining his form, he's a credit to himself, his family and the sport.
'The sport is in good hands. The two Lukes, and Josh Rock, they are all very professional, they do their jobs.
'That is what darts needs. It is becoming more and more professional as time goes on.
Luke Littler takes part in annual fishing competition
'The Matchplay was definitely up there. The standard of it throughout was brilliant.
'Luke Littler hitting a nine-darter always helped. The semis-finals and final made it a great, great tournament.'
Later this month, Lewis will mark his return to televised darts – after a near two-and-half year absence.
The two-time world champion last threw competitive darts in front of the cameras at the PDC's UK Open in 2023 at Butlin's Minehead.
After that tournament, he decided to walk away from the sport for family reasons and having fallen out of love with the game.
His wife Sarah has 'an incurable kidney disease' and his son 'has autism and ADHD (Attention Deficit Hyperactivity Disorder)', which has meant his full-time concentration and care.
His comeback will be the MODUS Super Series in Portsmouth at 10pm on Thursday August 28 – and should it all go well, he may attend PDC Q School in January.
If he regains his professional Tour Card, he will be reunited with old sparring partner Wade, who turned back the clock to reach the Matchplay final last month against expectation
Stoke-born Lewis said: 'I don't think James dropped below a 100 average all the way through the tournament, which takes some doing itself.
'To still do that after he has been playing for 20-odd years, he's a credit to the sport as well. I think he is very underlooked a lot of the time.
'Certainly, to me he has been the best finisher in the world over the last 20 years.
'He deserves more respect, definitely. That might put him in the Premier League next year, which he thoroughly deserves as well.
'He will just go from strength to strength and get more and more confidence.
'Obviously he reached another final and I think he can do big things again.'
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