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Luke Littler labelled a megastar by St Helens darts rival

Luke Littler walks out to play Rob Cross in the semi-finals of the 2023/24 World Darts Championship at Alexandra Palace <i>(Image: Zac Goodwin/PA)</i>
Luke Littler walks out to play Rob Cross in the semi-finals of the 2023/24 World Darts Championship at Alexandra Palace (Image: Zac Goodwin/PA)

FORMER world champion Stephen Bunting has credited “megastar” Luke 'The Nuke' Littler with lifting darts to new heights.

This comes as they prepare for the start of another raucous PDC World Championship at Alexandra Palace in London later this month.

Bunting admits the sport’s popularity is a world away from when he won the now-defunct BDO title in 2014, and says the 17-year-old Warringtonian's extraordinary rise has rubbed off on his rivals.

“What Luke has done for our sport in such a short space of time is just incredible, and he is the name on everybody’s lips,” Bunting said.

“He’s a megastar and he’s taken our sport to the top echelons. We were already up there for viewing figures behind Premier League football, but it is now at another level.

“I notice it when I go shopping and I get young kids asking me for autographs and pictures, which never really happened before. It just shows how Luke’s success is bringing the demographic of darts fans down.”

Such is the sport’s current popularity – last year’s final, in which Littler was pipped by Luke Humphries, was the most watched non-football event in Sky Sports history – it has even been afforded the honour of a Panini trading card set which has been launched today.

Current stars, including Littler and Bunting, and some of the sport’s most famous champions feature in the set.

A long-time favourite of the Ally Pally crowd, St Helens-born Bunting cautioned against suggestions by the sport’s supremo Barry Hearn of a future move away from the venue which has hosted every World Championship since 2008.

“In my eyes it would be sad to move away from Ally Pally because it is an unbelievable place for darts,” added Bunting.

“You go there each year and there’s people dressed as Christmas trees and Batman and Robin. It’s a special place for players, officials and fans and it’s just a special venue.”