China Daily

Pizza-loving ‘Luke the Nuke’ grabs Britain’s imaginatio­n

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LONDON —

Darts may have its origins as a British pub game but, at 16, losing world championsh­ip finalist Luke

Littler is still too young to legally buy an alcoholic drink.

The teenage debutant’s run to Wednesday’s all-English showpiece match at London’s Alexandra Palace, where he lost 7-4 to world No 1 Luke Humphries after missing a dart to lead 5-2, earned him a runner-up check for 200,000 pounds ($253,000) just months after his high-school exams.

Premier League footballer­s were among the sports fans captivated by the story of Littler, who before his opening match two weeks ago was ranked 164th in the world but now boasts close to 500,000 Instagram followers and 100,000 on X, formerly Twitter.

“I’ve had a message off Luke Shaw of Manchester United, Rio Ferdinand and I had a message off Gary Neville and Jonny Evans ... so it’s just crazy,” said Littler, whose home in Warrington, northwest England, is some 18 miles from Old Trafford, before the final.

Littler’s road to becoming darts’ youngest world finalist included a 4-1 hammering of fivetime world champion Raymond van Barneveld, his childhood hero, and helped the sport generate television audiences in the millions.

He defeated 2018 champion Rob Cross 6-2 in the semifinal.

To its supporters, darts is a game of fine motor skills allied to mathematic­al knowledge, made all the harder at profession­al level by the players being cheered by on by raucous and often alcoholfue­led crowds.

Players try to hit specific small targets while standing over seven feet (2.37 meters) from the board where the most valuable ‘treble’ sections are also the smallest.

The aim is to go from 501 to exactly zero in the fewest number of darts while finishing either on a double on the outer edge of the board or the central bullseye.

Each player takes turns to throw three darts, with the highest total possible 180 — three treble 20s.

Littler, nicknamed ‘Luke the Nuke’, hit 16 180s against Cross.

Promoter Barry Hearn, a key behind-the-scenes figure in snooker’s rise to UK television popularity in the 1980s, has labeled darts “the working man’s golf”.

Dubious diet

But there are those who question whether the lack of athletic activity involved means darts can truly call itself a sport, with Littler’s prematch routine at the world championsh­ip unlikely to appease the skeptics.

“I don’t wake up until 12, in the morning go for my ham and cheese omelette, come here and have my pizza, and then go on the practice board,” said Littler, also known for celebratin­g his victories with a postmatch kebab.

But this year’s world championsh­ip was still the subject of a feature in The Economist, a magazine known for its political analysis, on what it said was darts’ “debauched collision of fancy dress (the fans) and elite sport”.

And after the final, British Prime Minister Rishi Sunak tweeted: “Congratula­tions Luke, a great win tonight. What an incredible final to end a historic championsh­ip.”

Littler is no overnight success story, however, having first played as a small boy and attending the St Helens Youth Darts Academy from the age of 9.

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Luke Littler

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