
‘There are so many in the making' – Nathan Aspinall reveals there's an army of Luke Littlers ready to take over darts
But he claims the next generation of tungsten throwers will be groomed in sports academies rather than unearthed on building sites.
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Nathan Aspinall believes there's an army of Luke Littlers ready to take over darts
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Aspinall was part of the celebrity cohort invited to James Maddison's golf invitational
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The darts ace said everyone was talking darts on the golf meet
The 17-week Premier League Darts reached its climax last Thursday night with Luke Humphries beating Luke Littler in the O2 Arena final.
Two days before that, Prem semi-finalist Aspinall was a guest at Tottenham playmaker James Maddison's golf day at The Centurion Club with darts pal Joe Cullen.
The annual invitational golf tournament – which raises funds for different causes – was attended by ex-footballers John Terry, Jimmy Bullard, Wes Morgan, Gareth Barry and comedian Michael McIntyre.
And Aspinall – a two-time major winner – claims everybody was talking to him about Littler and Co.
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Stockport's world No.9 said: 'Everyone is obsessed with darts. I was at this golf day and everyone wanted to talk to me about the darts.
'I'm looking around, all these footballers and actors and stuff. Everyone was speaking to me.
'Everyone loves darts. Whatever you're a celebrity, own a company, from a council estate. Whether you're a kid. A woman. A Man.
'We all know we owe a lot of it to Luke. But also the rest of the guys that turn out week-in, week-out.
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'Oh my god, John Terry shot four under gross. And he plays off five.
'Joe Cullen played as well. He was a bit worse for wear the next morning, shall we say.
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'Humphries was asked to play in it but he didn't want to risk injuring himself before the finals. Whereas I couldn't give a s***.'
Littler emerged on the senior scene in December 2023 aged 16 and raced all the way to the World Darts final where he lost to Humphries.
A year later, he went one step further and lifted the Sid Waddell Trophy at the age of 17.
It is a far cry from previous world champions like Phil Taylor (ceramic factory), Gary Anderson (grate builder), Peter Wright (tyre fitter) and Rob Cross (electrician) who had other jobs before throwing darts.
Yet Aspinall – who runs a darts academy in the North West – reckons there is an army of wannabe Littlers set to appear in the coming years.
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Luke Humphries beat Littler in the Premier League Darts final on Thursday
Credit: PA
Aspinall, a father of two, said: 'There are so many more Luke Littlers in the making at the moment. It's mental.
'I might be 33 but I'm an old boy compared to what's coming through.
'If the money gets to like golf levels, there's no way people are doing this for 25 years.
'Guys in their early to mid-30s are the last of a generation and after us it's going to be all these kids coming through, who're fearless.
'Then it will go from this pub game, which everyone still calls it, even though it is not. And it will finally be called a sport in 5-10 years.
'But the problem you're going to have is: Where are the characters?
'You see it with footballers when they do their interviews, they are robots. They get told what to say. And they are all the same answers all the time.
'I think people like myself, I just say it as it is. It gets me in trouble a lot of time. I've had no media training in my career.
'I was thrown into the deep end. I don't want darts to get that to level. Because you do need those characters in the game.
'If everyone turns up and they are all the same, they all throw the same, no-one celebrates, does the interviews the same, it would get boring. Hopefully that doesn't happen.'
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Luke Littler produced an impressive 11-dart leg to seal a 16-14 victory over Andrew Gilding in their Betfred World Matchplay quarter-final. The world champion never went behind and produced a 103.91 average to set up a semi-final against Josh Rock at Blackpool. Littler had a five-leg advantage at one point in the contest, during which he produced 18 maximums. You lot got your moneys worth again😅😂 over the line and into the semi finals🫡 — Luke Littler (@LukeTheNuke180) July 25, 2025 However, Gilding set up a tense finish – with a 160 finish the highlight of a three-leg streak by the former UK Open champion. Littler, 18, said afterwards: 'I just had to stay focused, and I'm so glad to get over the line. 'Andrew is a top player. He fought back really well, and that's why he's a major champion. 'He's such a tough opponent, but I didn't panic. I missed a few doubles at times, but my scoring power was really strong tonight. 'The atmosphere was unbelievable. I really didn't want to go to a tie-break, so to hit an 11-darter with back-to-back 180s was class.' Rock managed a 104.02 average in his 16-11 win over Gerwyn Price, the fourth quarter-final to be played at the Winter Gardens. The victor said afterwards: 'I can't wait to finally play Luke on the big stage. The darting world will be watching that game. 'Luke is one of my close friends behind the scenes. Hopefully we both turn up, but I'm sure it will be a cracking game.' Saturday's other best-of-33 leg semi-final sees James Wade face Jonny Clayton.


North Wales Chronicle
41 minutes ago
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Luke Littler finishes with a flourish to reach World Matchplay semi-finals
The world champion never went behind and produced a 103.91 average to set up a semi-final against Josh Rock at Blackpool. Littler had a five-leg advantage at one point in the contest, during which he produced 18 maximums. You lot got your moneys worth again😅😂 over the line and into the semi finals🫡 — Luke Littler (@LukeTheNuke180) July 25, 2025 However, Gilding set up a tense finish – with a 160 finish the highlight of a three-leg streak by the former UK Open champion. Littler, 18, said afterwards: 'I just had to stay focused, and I'm so glad to get over the line. 'Andrew is a top player. He fought back really well, and that's why he's a major champion. 'He's such a tough opponent, but I didn't panic. I missed a few doubles at times, but my scoring power was really strong tonight. 'The atmosphere was unbelievable. I really didn't want to go to a tie-break, so to hit an 11-darter with back-to-back 180s was class.' Rock managed a 104.02 average in his 16-11 win over Gerwyn Price, the fourth quarter-final to be played at the Winter Gardens. The victor said afterwards: 'I can't wait to finally play Luke on the big stage. The darting world will be watching that game. 'Luke is one of my close friends behind the scenes. Hopefully we both turn up, but I'm sure it will be a cracking game.' Saturday's other best-of-33 leg semi-final sees James Wade face Jonny Clayton.

South Wales Argus
2 hours ago
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Luke Littler finishes with a flourish to reach World Matchplay semi-finals
The world champion never went behind and produced a 103.91 average to set up a semi-final against Josh Rock at Blackpool. Littler had a five-leg advantage at one point in the contest, during which he produced 18 maximums. You lot got your moneys worth again😅😂 over the line and into the semi finals🫡 — Luke Littler (@LukeTheNuke180) July 25, 2025 However, Gilding set up a tense finish – with a 160 finish the highlight of a three-leg streak by the former UK Open champion. Littler, 18, said afterwards: 'I just had to stay focused, and I'm so glad to get over the line. 'Andrew is a top player. He fought back really well, and that's why he's a major champion. 'He's such a tough opponent, but I didn't panic. I missed a few doubles at times, but my scoring power was really strong tonight. 'The atmosphere was unbelievable. I really didn't want to go to a tie-break, so to hit an 11-darter with back-to-back 180s was class.' Rock managed a 104.02 average in his 16-11 win over Gerwyn Price, the fourth quarter-final to be played at the Winter Gardens. The victor said afterwards: 'I can't wait to finally play Luke on the big stage. The darting world will be watching that game. 'Luke is one of my close friends behind the scenes. Hopefully we both turn up, but I'm sure it will be a cracking game.' Saturday's other best-of-33 leg semi-final sees James Wade face Jonny Clayton.