Forty eight hours after St. Patrick's day and another party is scheduled as Ireland beckons for the Premier League elite this Thursday, with Dublin playing host to the seventh electrifying instalment of this year’s travelling darts roadshow.
Just a few weeks ago, on the only other Emerald Isle stop in Belfast, spectators were treated to the tournament’s sole perfect leg of the campaign thus far - a moment of immaculate, almost surgical brilliance delivered by one of their own, Josh Rock. Now, in this storied Celtic capital - whose name charmingly translates to Black Pool, another cathedral of tungsten theatre - the Dublin faithful will be yearning for a similarly spellbinding slice of darting magic.
Proceedings commence with a pair of tantalising national derbies, beginning with a heavyweight Dutch duel between the two highest ranked players the Netherlands currently has to offer. The rapidly ascending Gian van Veen locks horns with his illustrious compatriot, Michael van Gerwen. Cast your mind back to the embryonic stages of the campaign and it was this very pairing that contested the final on Tyneside, where the Green Machine asserted his authority.
That triumph remains the solitary Dutch nightly victory of the season - a statistic that rather neatly encapsulates the contrasting trajectories of the duo. Seven-time Premier League champion van Gerwen has endured a perplexing dip, failing to register a match win since week two in Antwerp. Meanwhile, van Veen, after a vibrant and promising opening salvo, has seen his momentum stutter across the past fortnight, unable to augment his points tally. As ever with MVG, the outcome hinges precariously on which iteration of the Dutch titan arrives on stage.
Next comes a fiercely charged all English encounter - Bunting versus Littler - a clash steeped in North West rivalry where sporting tribalism runs through the veins. This is not merely Bullet against Nuke; it is Liverpool versus Manchester United, St Helens against Warrington, a cultural collision as much as a darting one.
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Stephen Bunting, after a dismal opening sequence that saw him exit at the first hurdle in four consecutive weeks, has reignited his campaign with emphatic vigour, claiming nightly honours on his most recent Irish Sea excursion. Luke Littler, meanwhile, continues to operate with almost absurd consistency - conquering Cardiff before seamlessly transitioning to Minehead, where he successfully defended his UK Open crown with ruthless efficiency.
For Northern Ireland’s Josh Rock, the narrative is far less triumphant. The Antrim thrower, in his debut Premier League season, remains anchored at the foot of the table without a single point to his name. His opponent, Gerwyn Price, presents a formidable obstacle - a man in imperious form who appears to be thriving in this year’s competition.
Rock currently finds himself nine points adrift of the coveted top four and O2 qualification. For now, his focus will be singular and immediate: secure that elusive first victory. Only then can the arithmetic of qualification begin to enter the conversation.
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At the summit of the standings, however, resides a man with no such anxieties. Jonny Clayton arrives in Dublin in scintillating form, perched proudly at the top of the leader board and already casting a long, confident shadow towards London’s grand finale.
The Ferret, bookies favourite for the wooden spoon before a dart was thrown, boasts a commanding eight-point cushion over second-placed Luke Littler, and an even more emphatic ten-point advantage over his opening opponent, Luke Humphries.
For Cool Hand, the equation is simple yet significant - a victory on the night would propel him back into the top four, where he will be determined to re-establish his footing. Clayton, regardless of outcomes elsewhere, is guaranteed to depart the 3Arena still leading the charge - the only uncertainty is the magnitude of his supremacy.
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Twelve months ago, it was Gerwyn Price who revelled in Dublin’s electric atmosphere, riding the wave of the River Liffey to overcome Nathan Aspinall in the final. The Welshman will be quietly harbouring ambitions of replicating that triumph, as the Premier League caravan rolls into another night brimming with tension, and the ever-present promise of something extraordinary.
PREMIER LEAGUE – WEEK SEVEN FIXTURES
Dublin, Ireland (Thu 19th March)
Quarter-Finals
Gian van Veen v Michael van Gerwen
Stephen Bunting v Luke Littler
Josh Rock v Gerwyn Price
Jonny Clayton v Luke Humphries

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