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Price to continue as Premier League pantomime villain after wild card pick

SELECTED: Gerwyn Price will play in the 2025 Premier League <i>(Image: Zac Goodwin)</i>
SELECTED: Gerwyn Price will play in the 2025 Premier League (Image: Zac Goodwin)

GERWYN Price has earned a wild card pick to play in this year’s Premier League Darts.

Price, who was knocked out in the quarter-finals of the World Championship, has been selected for the eight-man competition, which starts in Belfast on February 6 and runs through to the final in London on May 29.

The 39-year-old from Markham finished seventh in last year’s Premier League after being runner-up in 2023.

Price, who is ranked ninth in the PDC, will be part of the 13th edition of the Premier League but there are no spots for his fellow former world champions Michael Smith and Peter Wright.

Smith was a semi-finalist in last season’s edition after he clinched World Championship success in 2023 but has dropped to 16th in the world rankings, while former Premier League runner-up Wright has struggled for form over the past 12 months.

Newly crowned world champion Luke Littler, Luke Humphries, Michael van Gerwen and Rob Cross were already assured of a place in the tournament and will be joined by wild cards Price, Stephen Bunting, Chris Dobey and Nathan Aspinall.

Reigning Masters winner Bunting, ranked fifth in the world, will be a popular addition after his fine run to the last four at Alexandra Palace, but Dave Chisnall, Jonny Clayton and Damon Heta – sixth, seventh and eighth in the world – all miss out.

Players Championship champion Dobey was another to enjoy an excellent World Championship campaign with a semi-final appearance after edging out Price in the last eight.

PDC chief executive Matt Porter told Sky Sports: “Obviously with Price, Dobey and Aspinall, there are players above them in the rankings who haven’t been selected but we have looked at it in terms of big stage presence, popularity, and the way they can get a 10,000-person crowd every Thursday going.

“We want people on the edge of their seats. We want people up and enjoying their darts. That isn’t to say other players can’t do that. You have to make decisions on who is right at the time.”