
Luke Littler beats James Wade to win first World Matchplay crown in Blackpool
Littler claimed a hard-fought 18-13 victory at the Winter Gardens to become the fifth player to win the PDC Triple Crown – Phil Taylor, Michael van Gerwen, Gary Anderson and Luke Humphries having also won World Championship, Matchplay and Premier League titles.
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Wade was in his seventh Matchplay final 18 years on from his solitary success in 2007, which came six months after Littler was born.
Luke Littler is the new king of the Winter Gardens! 👑
The 18-year-old produces another spectacular performance to become the youngest champion in the history of the Betfred World Matchplay! 👏
pic.twitter.com/d61nEaXtny
— PDC Darts (@OfficialPDC)
July 27, 2025
Littler's scoring power in a high-quality contest proved decisive – he hit 17 180s to Wade's six in averaging 107 – and set a new tournament record of 64 maximums, beating Adrian Lewis' previous best of 56.
'It means absolutely everything,' Littler told Sky Sports after winning the last four legs to hold the Phil Taylor Trophy aloft.
'I idolise Phil, he's come here 16 times and won it. Now my name is on this trophy – and I can say I've completed the Triple Crown.
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'Since I started on the Tour and got my Tour card I've always said to myself, 'as long as I win one of every major I'll be happy.'
'I've only got a few left to tick off and I'll definitely chase the majors I haven't won yet.'
Littler had to mount another comeback 24 hours after losing the first five legs of his semi-final to Northern Ireland's Josh Rock.
Wade stormed into a 5-0 lead but did not have a single dart at a double in the second mini-session as Littler levelled in style.
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The 42-year-old left-hander produced an 11-darter in the next, but Littler responded by winning successive legs to lead for the first time at 7-6.
Wade managed to keep in touch, helped by a bull finish in the 19th leg, and fought back from a double break down to cut the gap to just one at 14-13.
LITTLER REIGNS AT THE WINTER GARDENS! ☢️
LUKE LITTLER IS THE 2025 WORLD MATCHPLAY CHAMPION!
The World Champion produces a sensational display to defeat James Wade 18-13 and lift the Phil Taylor Trophy for the first time! 👏
#MatchplayDarts
| Final
pic.twitter.com/DoHwZsORJQ
— PDC Darts (@OfficialPDC)
July 27, 2025
But Littler pulled away and crossed the line in style with a 115 out shot (20-57-38), the biggest finish of the match.
'A little bit,' Littler said when asked if he had felt in control. 'Five-nil down once again, I said, 'I've been here before, what are you doing?'
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'But I managed to pull it out of the bag and win the next five. I've shown I can come back from 5-0 or 7-3 down.
'I'm happy I can pull myself out of these scorelines, but I don't want to be 5-0 down again.
'James started to drop off a bit and I started to find my best darts.'
By winning the title 18-year-old Littler became the youngest ever champion in Matchplay history, six years younger than Wade when he lifted the title.
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At the Oval 20 years ago, England led 2-1 at the end of a wildly oscillating five-match series. In their second innings, the host's No 5 arrived at a fraught moment and then summoned an innings of swagger and dazzling skill. Kevin Pietersen's 158 against Australia will forever remain one of English cricket's most cherished Test innings: a monument of clean-striking chutzpah that regained the Ashes. At the same ground two decades on, Harry Brook produced a worthy encore. In the fourth innings, rather than the third as Pietersen was, Brook knew that the equation was simple. He arrived at 106-3; England would either score another 268 runs or be defeated. In 2005, Pietersen arrived with 16.1 overs until lunch; Brook's arrival came with just 10.3 overs until the same interval. Yet while Pietersen waited until the second session to unfurl his full assault, Brook saw no need to delay his attack. Brook's initial treatment of Akash Deep foreshadowed the violence to come. 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