Humphries wins back-to-back US Darts Masters thriller 8-7

Luke Humphries retained the US Darts Masters title with a thrilling deciding-leg victory against Luke Littler on a record-breaking night in New York. Humphries created another slice of history at Madison Square Garden, becoming the first player to win back-to-back titles in the Big Apple. Humphries and Littler partnered England to World Cup glory earlier this month, and the world’s top two resumed their rivalry in front of a sell-out crowd of 5,000 fans – a record for darts in the US. Littler was aiming
to lift the coveted crown for the first time in his career, although the reigning champion had other ideas, racing into a commanding 4-1 lead. The world number one responded with four straight legs to seize the initiative, only for Humphries to produce a late turnaround and celebrate his third World Series of Darts title. Littler: ‘What’s the point in paying money for tickets and then coming to boo?’Darts in 2026: Key dates, calendar, results 📅Got Sky? Watch on the Sky Sports app 📱Not got
Sky? Get instant access with NOW 📺 “This is the most iconic venue I think darts will ever go to,” reflected Humphries, who averaged 104 to prevail in a thrilling finale. “Every year we come here it gets better and better, and the fans have been absolutely amazing. It’s been insane. “It’s great to go back-to-back. I’m always out to set records and do things that not many players have done. “Me and Luke always have fantastic games, and it’s just another brilliant game in
the saga of Luke v Luke. “I feel if I can keep performing like this then I can keep pushing him, because he’s unbelievable. He’s the toughest player in the world to beat.” Humphries was averaging over 107 in the opening stages of Friday’s showpiece, but after squandering two darts for a 5-1 lead, the pendulum appeared to shift. Littler – who crashed in nine maximums during a pulsating affair – hit back with a trademark mid-match burst to take control, but Humphries stemmed the
tide with a clinical 72 kill to level at 5-5. The pair then exchanged convincing holds in the closing stages, and the advantage of throw proved pivotal for Humphries, who conjured a sensational 11-darter in the decider to complete the fairytale in New York. The 31-year-old performed magnificently on Finals Day, overcoming Stephen Bunting and Gian van Veen en route to his latest big stage title. Having averaged almost 106 in a 6-3 win against Bunting, Humphries produced a sensational four-leg flurry to topple Van
Veen, overturning a 6-3 deficit and surviving two match darts to triumph. Littler, meanwhile, followed up his opening round victory over David Cameron by accounting for another Canadian in the quarter-finals, averaging north of 102 in his 6-1 demolition of Jim Long. The World Champion then fended off a resilient James Wade in the last four, despite the ten-time TV title winner averaging over a ton and hitting all of his four attempts at double. “It was an unbelievable experience tonight,” admitted the 19-year-old, who
was featuring in his maiden US Darts Masters final. “There were a lot of England fans here who are going to the World Cup game [tomorrow] so I appreciate them coming along. “As the night went on they got louder and louder, and I wish I was in the crowd with them to be fair!” Earlier in the night, Wade won through a high-quality affair against Gerwyn Price, defying a 103.93 average from the 2024 runner-up in sealing a 6-3 success. In the evening’s other
quarter-final, Van Veen swept aside Jonny Clayton by the same scoreline, averaging north of 106 and converting a brace of ton-plus checkouts in the process. The World Series of Darts continues with a double-header in New Zealand and Australia in August, with visits to Auckland and Wollongong preceding September’s World Series of Darts Finals. US Darts Masters Thursday June 25Round One Gian van Veen 6-1 Fred KruegerGerwyn Price 6-4 Brayden HallJames Wade 6-3 Adam SevadaJim Long 6-4 Josh RockLuke Littler 6-4 David CameronLuke Humphries 6-1
Leonard GatesJonny Clayton 6-2 Gary MawsonStephen Bunting 6-2 Alex Spellman Friday June 26Quarter-Finals Luke Littler 6-1 Jim LongJames Wade 6-3 Gerwyn PriceLuke Humphries 6-3 Stephen BuntingGian van Veen 6-3 Jonny Clayton Semi-FinalsLuke Littler 7-4 James WadeLuke Humphries 7-6 Gian van Veen FinalLuke Humphries 8-7 Luke Littler What’s happening on Sky Sports next? The 2026 Betfred World Matchplay will take place at the iconic Winter Gardens from July 18-26, as a 32-player field compete for the prestigious Phil Taylor Trophy. World No 1 Luke Littler will
be eyeing back-to-back titles in Blackpool, with 2024 champion Luke Humphries and three-time World Matchplay winner Michael van Gerwen also set to star in the £1m event. This summer’s action will also feature the fifth staging of the Betfred Women’s World Matchplay, as eight of the biggest names in the women’s game battle it out for the title currently occupied by Lisa Ashton. Who will win this year’s World Matchplay Darts? Luke Littler will be defending his title and you can watch all the action
on Sky Sports. Stream darts and more top sport with NOW.
US Darts Masters, Luke Humphries, Luke Littler, Madison Square Garden, darts final, 8-7, World Series of Darts, England World Cup glory
Darts is lowkey better than most sports lol.
Wait so they booed even though it was a sell-out?? Like what’s the point paying if you’re gonna boo the whole time. Also 8-7 sounds super close, love that.
Luke vs Luke is confusing to me, I thought it said Luke Humphries and Luke Littler like 2 different leagues. But if Littler was up 4-1 then lost, that’s crazy. I bet the “Madison Square Garden” effect is real, once crowds get loud people throw worse or something.
Madison Square Garden for darts feels illegal lol. 5,000 fans record for the US? That’s actually wild. I don’t even follow darts but the headline makes it sound like Humphries basically stole it at the end, which honestly I respect. Also the ticket boo thing… like, it’s supposed to be a sport not a vibe check.