Summary

  • Luke Littler beats Luke Humphries 6-5 to win World Masters title for first time

  • Teenager has now won 11 PDC major titles - the joint third-most in history

  • He only trails Michael van Gerwen (48) and Phil Taylor (79)

  • Semi-final results: Luke Littler 5-4 Gerwyn Price & Luke Humphries 5-0 Gian van Veen

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  1. Littler v Price - recent recordpublished at 19:14 GMT 1 February

    Littler v Price (19:15 GMT)

    Having previously been a bogey opponent for Luke Littler, Gerwyn Price has been less successful in recent clashes against The Nuke.

    In the past 10 meetings between the duo, Littler has come out on top in nine of them, including all of the final eight meetings between them in 2025.

    In 2026 so far, they have one victory each to their name.

  2. Littler v Price - route to the semispublished at 19:13 GMT 1 February

    Littler v Price (19:15 GMT)

    Gerwyn Price and Luke Littler bump fistsImage source, Getty Images

    Here is a look at how tonight's first two semi-finalists got to the last four...

    Luke Littler

    • First round: 3-2 win over Mike De Decker
    • Second round: 4-1 win over Ross Smith
    • Quarter-finals: 4-0 win over Josh Rock

    Gerwyn Price

    • First round: 3-0 win over James Hurrell
    • Second round: 4-3 win over Jonny Clayton
    • Quarter-finals: 4-2 win over Chris Dobey
  3. What does the Masters mean for the PDC's Order of Merit?published at 19:11 GMT 1 February

    Gerwyn Price celebratesImage source, Getty Images

    What is confirmed is that the top three in the PDC's Order of Merit will remain in the same order, but Luke Humphries and Gian van Veen have the chance to close the gap on world number one Luke Littler.

    The biggest move in the rankings rests solely on the performance of Gerwyn Price.

    Price started the tournament as the world number 12, where he remains in the live rankings. He could however move as high as sixth, should he win the Masters.

    A semi-final win over Littler would take Price up to 10th, with a tournament victory worth a further four places for the Welshman.

  4. What is the Winmau World Masters prize money?published at 19:08 GMT 1 February

    At this year's Winmau World Masters, there is a total prize fund of £500,000, with £100,000 awarded to tonight's winner.

    Prize money breakdown:

    • Winner: £100,000
    • Runner-up: £50,000
    • Semi-final losers: £30,000
    • Quarter-final losers: £17,500
    • Second round losers: £10,000
    • First round losers: £5,000
    • Preliminary round last 16 losers: £2,500
    • Preliminary round last 32 losers: £1,000
    • Preliminary round last 64 losers: £750
  5. What is the match format?published at 19:05 GMT 1 February

    The Winmau World Masters uses set play instead of legs, but with a twist.

    Unlike in the PDC World Darts Championship where sets are a best of five legs, in the Masters, sets are just a best of three legs.

    It means that while there is the added pressure and focus on winning sets, they are faster-paced and have less room for error than traditional set play.

  6. Sunday's evening schedulepublished at 19:03 GMT 1 February

    All times in GMT

    Semi-finals (best of nine sets):

    • Luke Littler v Gerwyn Price (19:15)
    • Luke Humphries v Gian van Veen (approx 20:15)

    Final (best of 11 sets)

    • Littler/Price v Humphries/Van Veen (approx 21:30)
  7. Welcome to World Masters finals nightpublished at 19:00 GMT 1 February

    Hello and welcome to the live text for the final night of the 2026 Winmau World Masters.

    Tonight, this year's World Masters champion will be decided with the semi-finals and final of this year's tournament in Milton Keynes taking place.

    It is a star-studded night with three previous world champions and four players in this year's Premier League in action.

    The first semi-final is due to start in around 15 minutes time, so let's take a look at what is to come in the next few hours.