Luke Littler conjured a spellbinding and magnificently orchestrated comeback against last year’s Dublin champion Gerwyn Price, securing his second Premier League nightly triumph of the campaign in a contest that veered from apparent inevitability to utter improbability.
As far as the ever-expanding reach of the PDC extends, there are remarkably few territories left unconquered by the reigning World Champion. Yet Ireland had remained an anomalous outlier, a curious statistical blemish on an otherwise glittering résumé. Not only had Littler failed to claim silverware on Irish soil, he had, somewhat astonishingly, yet to register a single match victory there. It is safe to say that particular narrative was emphatically dismantled.
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Gian van Veen’s withdrawal through illness introduced an immediate structural alteration to proceedings, gifting his illustrious compatriot Michael van Gerwen a direct passage into the semi-finals. Barely half an hour into the broadcast, the Dutchman already knew his fate. Littler had stormed into a commanding 5-1 advantage, and although Stephen Bunting briefly halved the deficit, the damage had long since become irreparable. Once again, the St Helens thrower departed a Thursday evening armed with a ton plus average yet cruelly devoid of any tangible reward in the form of points.
Gerwyn Price, the first of the Welsh contingent to grace the stage, delivered a ruthlessly efficient and brutally one-sided demolition of Josh Rock, administering a clinical whitewash that left the Northern Irishman largely powerless. The reception afforded to Rock by the Dublin crowd was, at best, inhospitable, and his performance never truly ignited. Price, by contrast, operated with relentless intensity, shifting through the gears with ominous ease.
Completing the opening round fixtures, Luke Humphries produced a performance of surgical precision to inflict Jonny Clayton’s first quarter-final defeat of the season. Prior to this encounter, the Welshman had consistently negotiated the opening hurdle, but that sequence was abruptly curtailed by the reigning Premier League champion. The match itself unfolded in three distinct phases: an opening flurry dominated by Humphries, a resilient middle passage orchestrated by Clayton, and a decisive closing segment once again commandeered by the world number one.
The semi-finals delivered yet another tantalising instalment of the burgeoning Littler versus Van Gerwen rivalry. Making his first appearance of the evening, the Dutch icon appeared poised for progression, establishing a 5-3 lead and exerting considerable control. However, Littler, displaying both composure and audacious scoring power, engineered a dramatic reversal. In a contest embellished by both players registering a ‘Big Fish’ finish, it was the Warrington wunderkind who ultimately prevailed, edging a contest rich in quality and tension.
In the other last four clash, Gerwyn Price reaffirmed his enduring affinity with the Dublin stage, producing a performance of extraordinary calibre. To overcome a player of Humphries’ stature is an achievement in itself; to do so whilst conceding a solitary leg elevates it into the realm of the exceptional. Averaging 109 and converting two thirds of his attempts at double, Price delivered a display of devastating efficiency and unrelenting authority.
The final initially hinted at a classic, full distance epic. Instead, it threatened to devolve into a procession. Despite neither finalist reaching their absolute zenith, Price surged into a dominant and seemingly insurmountable lead, standing on the brink of successive Dublin triumphs having relinquished just a single leg throughout the evening.
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When Littler finally punctured the scoreboard, it appeared little more than a token gesture. Yet momentum, that most elusive and volatile of sporting commodities, began to shift. One leg became two, two became three, and suddenly the entire complexion of the contest transformed. What had moments earlier resembled a foregone conclusion now hinged on a single visit. With Price poised to throw for victory, Littler seized the initiative, wrestled back control, and completed a comeback of remarkable resilience and composure.
Jonny Clayton will head to the German leg of the tour still perched atop the Premier League standings, although his advantage has now been trimmed to a slender three-point margin, with Littler rapidly closing in. Price’s evening haul consolidates his position in third, while van Veen’s absence allows Luke Humphries to leapfrog the Dutchman and occupy the final qualifying berth, further intensifying an already fiercely contested race for the play offs.
PREMIER LEAGUE – WEEK SEVEN RESULTS
Dublin, Ireland (Thu 19th March)
Quarter-Finals
Michael van Gerwen W/D Gian van Veen
Luke Littler 6-3 Stephen Bunting
Gerwyn Price 6-0 Josh Rock
Luke Humphries 6-3 Jonny Clayton
Semi-Finals
Luke Littler 6-5 Michael van Gerwen
Gerwyn Price 6-1 Luke Humphries
Final
Luke Littler 6-5 Gerwyn Price
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