Monday, 12 January 2026

Tungsten Analysis 2025 Awards

Will get this sorted in a bit better time than I did last year at least

Best single tournament performance

2017 - Phil Taylor, World Matchplay
2018 - Gary Anderson, World Matchplay
2019 - Peter Wright, World Championship
2020 - Ryan Searle, Players Championship 3
2021 - Peter Wright, Players Championship Finals
2022 - Ross Smith, European Championship
2023 - Andrew Gilding, UK Open
2024 - Mike de Decker, World Grand Prix

Nominees - Stephen Bunting, Players Championship 25, Ross Smith, Players Championship 16, Jonny Clayton, Players Championship 14, Michael van Gerwen, German Darts Grand Prix, Luke Littler, UK Open, James Wade, World Matchplay, Luke Littler, Players Championship Finals, Justin Hood, Luke Littler, Ryan Searle, World Championship

Winner - Gian van Veen, European Championship

Lot of efforts I want to give shout outs to. Bunting at PC25 was immense with four averages over 105 in a row not dropping under 98 in the tournament. Smith at PC16 dropped just 10 legs in the event, including a 24 leg winning run from midway in the last sixteen through to the title. Clayton in the last PC event I'll mention was over 100 in every game bar one (where he beat van Gerwen 6-1) ending with a dominating final display. van Gerwen himself in Munich was unplayable, averaging well over a ton for the tournament prior to beating van Veen in the final. Littler naturally gets several mentions - the two Minehead tournaments were really impressive, hitting averages of 108, 107, 106, 104 and 101 in the UK Open only narrowly dropping below once against Ratajski, while at the PC Finals he went 104, 107, 102, 107, 108 and 103 to not drop below a hundred once. And, of course, his world title defence saw him highlight just how dominant he is right now, losing just four sets. Wade's Matchplay run was a real surprise, not just in making the final but the way he did it, only falling under a 100 once where he beat van Veen, coming through a hugely tough overtime game in the semi before sticking around with Littler for quite a long time. Other worlds performances saw Hood reach the quarters with levels of play that made him look like a clear top 32 player, if not higher, while Searle didn't drop a set until midway through the quarter final and was only stopped by the eventual champion. But I've got to give it to Gian - in a season where Littler won almost everything and Humphries was doing most of the other mopping up, to claim your first major in the way he did it with two extremely tight wins over world class opposition in the final session is enough to take the pick for me.

Match of the season

2017 - Rob Cross v Michael van Gerwen, World Championship
2018 - Gary Anderson v Mensur Suljovic, World Matchplay
2019 - Peter Wright v Noel Malicdem, World Championship
2020 - Michael van Gerwen v Joe Cullen, World Championship
2021 - Michael Smith v Jonny Clayton, World Championship
2022 - Dirk van Duijvenbode v Ryan Searle, Players Championship Finals
2023 - Luke Humphries v Joe Cullen, World Championship
2024 - Luke Littler v Gary Anderson, Grand Slam

Nominees - Gerwyn Price v Josh Rock, Players Championship 12, Jeffrey de Graaf v Stephen Bunting, Players Championship 24, Luke Littler v Josh Rock, Flanders Darts Trophy, Martin Schindler v Chris Dobey, Austrian Darts Open, Jonny Clayton v Danny Noppert, Dutch Darts Championship, Luke Humphries v Jonny Clayton, World Masters, James Wade v Jonny Clayton, World Matchplay, Luke Littler v Gerwyn Price, World Grand Prix, James Wade v Ricky Evans, World Championship

Winner - Justin Hood v Danny Noppert, World Championship

Another one where I think I need to give a lot of call outs. Starting with two Players Championship finals, both were 8-7 last leg deciders, Price seeing off a 110 average from Rock to claim his, while de Graaf got his first despite running into Bunting averaging 106. Littler/Rock in Belgium was another final that went all the way with both breaking 100, while the Schindler/Dobey and Clayton/Noppert games were kind of similar - both 6-4 so not quite so tense, but both players averaging obscenely high numbers. The World Masters final was a swingy job which went the distance, looking like Clayton would make an unlikely huge comeback only for Luke to hold his nerve at the end. Another Clayton loss was the epic Matchplay semi, both him and Wade maintaining 100+ averages for 38 legs. Price/Littler was another comeback special, Gerwyn flying out of the blocks with a 6-1 run to go 2-0 up in sets, only to have Littler come back, avoid match darts by Price, and finish in a deciding leg with a 152 out. Lastly we've got the Wade/Evans epic where it looked like Evans had done the hard work so many times, only to squander a 1-0 and 2-1 sets lead, do similar in the final set on a leg by leg basis, and then just manage to fall over the line with a great 99 out that looked real unlikely. But it has to go to the Hood/Noppert classic, Justin going into a big early lead, only for Danny to come back and get us to an epic swingy final set that went all the way to a sudden death leg.

Most disappointing season

2017 - Benito van de Pas
2018 - Rob Cross
2019 - Raymond van Barneveld
2020 - Adrian Lewis
2021 - Jeffrey de Zwaan
2022 - Ian White
2023 - Josh Rock
2024 - Jose de Sousa

Nominees - Kai Gotthardt, Mike de Decker, Dimitri van den Bergh, Michael Smith, Peter Wright, Dave Chisnall, Florian Hempel

Winner - Jim Williams

I made a last minute audible with this one as I was going to originally give it to Chizzy, who's had an absolute nightmare of a season, repeating the previous season's complete ineffectiveness on television but this time pairing it with a really mediocre Pro Tour/Euro Tour season which sees him nearly out of the top 32 on the Pro Tour rankings. In the end however, I opted for Jim - it doesn't seem that long ago that he was really close to making the difficult majors, but this year he ended up with less than ten grand worth of winnings on the floor and losing his tour card. That seemed unthinkable a couple of years back, but that's the new reality. Others to have poor seasons include Gotthardt, who I gave a lot of credit to twelve months ago but somehow earned even less than Williams did, de Decker, who had a really mediocre season which ended with being on the end of the biggest upset of the world championship, while his compatriot only made the worlds on account of his historic money and didn't qualify for anything else, and unlike de Decker, didn't even win a set at the worlds. Michael Smith has been working through injuries in fairness, but continues to slide down the rankings and may well end up being unseeded for the next worlds which given how recently he won that is crazy. Wright looks to be completely past his best at this stage, and while that's been something that's been said for more than a season or two now, there has in the past always been something that makes you think there's still the occasional good game in there. This season? Not so much. Finally, Florian was one of the few players inside the top 64 to not make the worlds after a floor season with very few high points, and it's cost him his tour card as a result.

Best young player

2017 - Justin van Tergouw
2018 - Luke Humphries/Leighton Bennett
2019 - Keane Barry
2020 - Callan Rydz
2021 - Rusty-Jake Rodriguez
2022 - Josh Rock
2023 - Luke Littler
2024 - Wessel Nijman

Nominees - Gian van Veen, Mitchell Lawrie, Charlie Manby, Cam Crabtree, Jenson Walker

Winner - Beau Greaves

Feels like it's been a fairly quiet year for younger players, if we discount Mitchell coming from more or less nowhere to a WDF worlds final and looking like, after 2026 will be a lost year because Development Tour eligibility reasons, an elite talent already. Manby has had real flashes and looked very competent in the worlds, while Cam's had a really solid first year in the tour, won the Dev Tour, looking good. Gian we know all about while Jenson was also very high up on the Development Tour rankings and has done quite a lot on the WDF senior circuit. But I'm going to give it to Beau - hard to think she's just turned 22 today (as I write, this might not get finished today), she's looked extremely competent on the Challenge Tour, finished only behind Crabtree on the Development Tour, been solid in the Pro Tour events she's played, beat Littler in the world youth and only stopped by the other (senior) world finalist to claim that title, fantastic UK Open showing, Grand Slam was extremely encouraging - she's at a top 64 level already, and the time is now to go pro, and thankfully she is doing.

Most disappointing news of the season

2017 - Phil Taylor still not getting it quietly
2018 - Everything to do with the UK Open
2019 - Everything to do with the BDO
2020 - Kyle McKinstry and Wessel Nijman match fixing
2021 - Everything to do with the European Tour/European Championship
2022 - Retrospective awarding of a World Championship place to the Women's Matchplay winner
2023 - PDC wrecking the European Tour going forward
2024 - PDC wrecking the European Tour going forward even more than they did last year

Nominees - PDC/WDF STILL not having every tournament on Dart Connect, seniors tour going busto, Lourence Ilagan missing the Grand Slam, John McDonald retiring

Winner - Dom Taylor learning absolutely nothing

I mean this is an obvious one. Taylor's an incredible talent, but has basically cost himself his tour card and the entirety of 2026 in terms of being able to continue to develop to where his game is just because he can't control himself. It's unfortunate, but it is what it is. In terms of other bad news, 2025 hasn't been awful - them still not moving the Euro Tour and other majors, even if they duplicate sportradar data, onto Dart Connect is absurd, that the efforts to get a seniors' circuit  didn't work is unfortunate for those that thought it might have been a sustainable revenue stream outside of the PDC system, there's been others that have missed big events (Springer for one) but Ilagan missing this seems a lot more huge as there's really not too many opportunities for players in his sort of spot to get multiple shots to test themselves. Meanwhile McDonald I think could have gone on for longer, but he'll pick his time and he has done, seems like a super nice guy and it's all the best for the future.

Personal highlight of the season

2017 - Mensur Suljovic wins the Champions League
2018 - Ian White claims a European Tour title
2019 - The explosion in quality from non-traditional areas
2020 - The PDC's efforts to get some sort of calendar on
2021 - Matt Campbell winning his tour card
2022 - Danny Noppert claiming a major title
2023 - A full return for the Asian Tour
2024 - Paul Lim making the Lakeside final

Nominees - Bunch of new title winners, PDC worlds being upset central, Gian van Veen winning a major title, expansion of the Euro Tour to new places

Winner - Jermaine Wattimena winning a brace of titles

To be honest, I've had a bit of a disconnect with the sport over the past year, and there's not been a huge amount that's seemed really great to me. Maybe, and I'll say it quietly, the same player winning everything is boring and going back to a late 90's/early 00's era of darts is not a good thing? That there's been a lot of players getting their first titles at all levels, and seeing a lot more upset results than I thought I would at the worlds made for an interesting tournament. It was great to see the Euro Tour being announced for new places coming forward, one being obvious, the other less so but what seemed like weird expansion places have worked in the past, while Gian getting a massive breakthrough was a great story. But I'm going to give it to Jermaine - to have been where he was, drop out of the top 32, work his way back and then finally get a senior title (then another!) and move to the highest he's been in the rankings playing the best darts of his career? Superb.

Best new tour card holder

2017 - Richard North
2018 - Danny Noppert
2019 - Glen Durrant
2020 - Damon Heta
2021 - Alan Soutar
2022 - Jim Williams
2023 - Gian van Veen
2024 - Dom Taylor

Nominees - Justin Hood, Wesley Plaisier, Sebastian Bialecki, Adam Lipscombe

Winner - Niko Springer

Could be only one really. Always looked like he'd have a good season, but as the only player new or old to play his way into the European Championship, rather than being gifted a spot, which he pretty much did before he actually won one, makes it an easy choice. Justin had a great worlds and an extremely strong level of play throughout the season, while Plaisier has looked very solid and also pulled off a big win at the worlds. Bialecki managed to win a title, while Lipscombe has looked steady and shown the occasional flash to do a lot more, giving himself a decent chance of retaining his card beyond 2026.

Most improved player

2017 - Daryl Gurney
2018 - Jeffrey de Zwaan
2019 - Nathan Aspinall
2020 - Devon Petersen
2021 - Martin Schindler
2022 - Martin Lukeman
2023 - Radek Szaganski
2024 - Kai Gotthardt

Nominees - Gian van Veen, Gemma Hayter, Justin Hood, Jamai van den Herik

Winner - Bradley Brooks

Few players who have made big steps up this season. van Veen came into the year without having even won a senior title, but leaves with a major, in the Premier League and stats at an elite level. Hayter was moderately unknown at the start of the year but improved to a level where she managed to qualify for the worlds, while van den Herik was more or less completely unknown but did the same after looking extremely strong on both the Challenge and Development Tours, as well as on the main Pro Tour when called up. Hood has pushed on a lot from the levels he was at when he was more or less just someone who'd looked steady on the Challenge Tour. But it's got to go to Bradley - he's been around for a while on and off the tour, but announced he'd improved quite a bit with his Q-School performance to win his card back, and has looked at a clear top 32 level since then, winning a first title and looking like another one who'll be pushing well up the rankings in 2026.

Player of the year

2017 - Rob Cross
2018 - Gary Anderson
2019 - Michael van Gerwen
2020 - Gerwyn Price
2021 - Jonny Clayton
2022 - Michael van Gerwen
2023 - Luke Humphries
2024 - Luke Littler

Nominees - Luke Humphries, Beau Greaves, Gian van Veen

Winner - Luke Littler

Can pretty much only be one really. The clear world number one, the clear best player statistically, and not just the world champion but also the winner of pretty much everything in the sport in 2025. Humphries and van Veen did a decent job of cleaning up what Luke didn't win, while Greaves' complete dominance of the Women's Series with an absurd (ongoing) winning run coupled with very solid displays on the other secondary tours to finally claim a card is also worthy of a mention. But none of them come close to Littler, who's the first player to retain this title, question is how long does he hold it for?

Back for a bit of a Q-School round up when I get the chance. Think I got 4 picks right in the UK and 3 in the EU (I might legitimately have picked de Zwaan had I seen Vandenbogaerde get a reprieve, but clearly have no way of proving this), pretty much hit the bar with Harrysson and Lennon for another couple but close is not correct obviously.

Monday, 5 January 2026

2026 Second/Third Division Darts selections

So, with the Premier League lineup being chosen, which I think is probably the best they could have done with it, we can go into the 2nd/3rd division picks for 2026:

Division Two:

On last season's rankings - Gary Anderson, Ross Smith
On last season's third division rankings - Wessel Nijman
On year end FRH rankings - Ryan Searle, James Wade, Danny Noppert, Nathan Aspinall
Wildcard one - Chris Dobey (highest player not in on both 2025 scoring and 2025 FRH rankings)
Wildcard two - Jermaine Wattimena (second highest in FRH rankings not in, fourth in 2025 scoring from those not already selected anywhere)
Wildcard three - Damon Heta (real shortage of players who have a combination of scoring as well as ranking, Heta has the latter but not really the former, but was in the top half of last year's second division so will give another shot)

Division Three:

On last season's rankings - Niels Zonneveld, Niko Springer
World youth champion - in Premier League
On year end FRH rankings - Martin Schindler, Kevin Doets, Callan Rydz, Connor Scutt
Wildcard one - Beau Greaves (world championship runner up, very dominant Challenge/Development Tour season, looks like she can compete at this level already)
Wildcard two - Sebastian Bialecki (solid Development Tour season, has shown very high peak, Pro Tour winner)
Wildcard three - Bradley Brooks (hugely improved over last 12-18 months, Pro Tour winner, highest scoring of anyone not selected who isn't likely to get a ban in the near future)
Wildcard four - Cam Crabtree (Development Tour winner, most sensible pick when looking at combination of rankings and scoring)

Always tricky to pick the last couple at each ranking, and next year in division three it might get tougher given there are a lot of players hitting 30 this year and hence making themselves ineligible for the next season. In terms of division two, Dirk and Cross had good scoring but I feel lacked results, Schindler was close on ranking but Heta had much better scoring to compensate for the one position difference. Woodhouse was behind Heta in more or less any metric I looked at, only mention him as another top 20 FRH player, de Decker is actually outscoring him but is only really holding on to a top 20 spot from his major last year. Third division was a bit less controversial. Although not listed in that order, Bialecki probably was the closest to getting bumped, Meikle has a decent ranking and is outscoring Bialecki a touch, but I'm going to give Sebastian the nudge having won an event this year and possibly I feel taking a big step in a second year of a tour card. I'd maybe have considered Manby or van den Herik if we knew they were getting cards, but we don't, get on the tour and have a steady season and you'll be in consideration. Not sure anyone else with an actual card already was under real consideration, maybe Dominik Gruellich is the only other name, but I don't think he's done that much outside of that Pro Tour final, everyone else in did more for me.

Sunday, 4 January 2026

End of tournament thoughts and end of year FRH rankings

So, Littler wins to nobody's surprise. That he won the final quite that easily might have been a bit of a surprise, while it's no secret that I'm much more bullish on Littler than most, Gian only winning the first set did come as a bit of a shock. In any case, the tournament is in the book and we rush straight to Q-School tomorrow, no rest for the wicked. New FRH rankings, I did just note that I didn't put any new ones up after the Players Championship Finals, probably just rushing to start on worlds previews not knowing how long they would take with the expanded field, so changes are since the Slam:

1 Luke Littler
2 Gian van Veen (UP 2)
3 Luke Humphries (DOWN 1)
4 Jonny Clayton (UP 2)
5 Gary Anderson (UP 13)
6 Ryan Searle (UP 14)
7 Michael van Gerwen (DOWN 4)
8 Josh Rock (UP 2)
9 James Wade (DOWN 1)
10 Stephen Bunting (DOWN 5)
11 Danny Noppert (DOWN 4)
12 Gerwyn Price (DOWN 3)
13 Nathan Aspinall (UP 2)
14 Chris Dobey (DOWN 3)
15 Jermaine Wattimena (UP 1)
16 Martin Schindler (DOWN 2)
17 Damon Heta (DOWN 4)
18 Ross Smith (DOWN 6)
19 Luke Woodhouse (NEW)
20 Mike de Decker (DOWN 3)

Only Nijman to drop out from there, if you will go out early then what can you do. As an added bonus, here's the year on year changes:

RankPlayerPointsLast YearChange
1Luke Littler2.23m21
2Gian van Veen780k2725
3Luke Humphries722k1-2
4Jonny Clayton463k95
5Gary Anderson438k127
6Ryan Searle418k1812
7Michael van Gerwen412k3-4
8Josh Rock405k179
9James Wade404k101
10Stephen Bunting401k4-6
11Danny Noppert399k132
12Gerwyn Price395k164
13Nathan Aspinall354k2310
14Chris Dobey337k5-9
15Jermaine Wattimena307k3015
16Martin Schindler299k226
17Damon Heta289k8-9
18Ross Smith282k14-4
19Luke Woodhouse275k3112
20Mike de Decker253k11-9
21Krzysztof Ratajski252k3413
22Wessel Nijman250k4321
23Rob Cross246k6-17
24Daryl Gurney235k240
25Ryan Joyce233k250
26Dirk van Duijvenbode230k326
27Cameron Menzies225k3811
28Dave Chisnall218k7-21
29Andrew Gilding207k290
30Peter Wright201k15-15
31Ricardo Pietreczko199k28-3
32Joe Cullen184k26-6
33Michael Smith178k21-12
34Ritchie Edhouse175k20-14
35Raymond van Barneveld154k33-2
36Kevin Doets153k426
37Justin Hood137kNEWNEW
38Dimitri van den Bergh136k19-19
39Willie O'Connor135k5718
40Martin Lukeman130k36-4
41Niels Zonneveld130k487
42Niko Springer126kNEWNEW
43Callan Rydz123k40-3
44Ricky Evans122k451
45Scott Williams114k37-8
46James Hurrell113k7428
47Madars Razma110k44-3
48Brendan Dolan110k35-13
49Gabriel Clemens101k39-10
50Michael Mansell101k41-9
51Connor Scutt98.5k46-5
52Wesley Plaisier94.2k542
53Jeffrey de Graaf93.5k47-6
54Karel Sedlacek91.9k6612
55Ian White89.7k51-4
56Mensur Suljovic88.7k659
57Ryan Meikle86.4k647
58Alan Soutar83.4k602
59Lukas Wenig82.2kNEWNEW
60Keane Barry78.2k53-7
61Andreas Harrysson76.1kNEWNEW
62Richard Veenstra75.7k50-12
63Nick Kenny72.9k62-1
64Dom Taylor72.6k7612
65Bradley Brooks72.1kNEWNEW
66Kim Huybrechts70.4k49-17
67Cameron Crabtree70.4kNEWNEW
68Mario Vandenbogaerde68.4k680
69Thibault Tricole67.3k59-10
70Darren Beveridge63.8kNEWNEW
71Charlie Manby62.5kNEWNEW
72Sebastian Bialecki59.2kNEWNEW
73Stephen Burton57.1k63-10
74Matt Campbell57.0k61-13
75Max Hopp54.9kNEWNEW
76Robert Owen54.9k58-18
77Chris Landman54.6k72-5
78Adam Lipscombe50.1kNEWNEW
79Matthew Dennant49.0kNEWNEW
80Steve Lennon48.9k73-7
81Stefan Bellmont48.5k10019
82Darius Labanauskas46.1kNEWNEW
83Andy Baetens44.4k9613
84Florian Hempel42.5k52-32
85Owen Bates42.4k9510
86Adam Hunt42.0kNEWNEW
87Cor Dekker41.2kNEWNEW
88Dominik Gruellich39.7kNEWNEW
89Dylan Slevin37.8k67-22
90Jose de Sousa37.6k56-34
91Arno Merk37.6kNEWNEW
92Leonard Gates37.5k90-2
93Mervyn King37.3k77-16
94Jurjen van der Velde34.9kNEWNEW
95Beau Greaves32.0kNEWNEW
96Haupai Puha31.8kNEWNEW
97Jamai van den Herik31.5kNEWNEW
98Maik Kuivenhoven31.2k79-19
99Alexis Toylo31.1kNEWNEW
100David Davies31.0kNEWNEW

23 players out, which is a lot more than last year relatively speaking, seems to be a lot less churn in the top 50, think that's somewhat down to the Euro Tour but not entirely sure. Jim Williams is the biggest casualty from 55, but then you need to go down to last year's #69 to see anyone else drop, 18 of the 23 players we lost were from the bottom 25. Clearly a lot of those were either players who got into the worlds and did nothing else, or those that were doing so-so on the tour but lost their card. One thing to note is how much the points tally has increased year on year. Number 100 is up over 50%, #75 nearly 40%, #50 is up about a third, but the top 32 and 16 tallies have not changed much at all. How much of that is Littler getting ALL the cake is unclear.

Betting went well, we ended up punting on nearly half the matches and grew the bankroll by 44%, which is pretty solid. Some games were slip ups for sure, but we're never going to go perfect and I can't complain with how things went in the slightest.

The Q-School entry list is out, it looks like it's going to be a moderately even split, so I'm going to pick 12 names from each - more than what will get cards, but as it looks fairly close as to the exact breakdown then I'll not pick a full list. So:

UK - Charlie Manby, Darren Beveridge, Steve Lennon, Adam Hunt, George Killington, Stephen Burton, David Davies, Conor Heneghan, Shane McGuirk, Stephen Rosney, Martin Thomas, Graham Usher
EU - Jamai van den Herik, Andreas Harrysson, Florian Hempel, Andy Baetens, Mario Vandenbogaerde, Teemu Harju, Krzysztof Kciuk, Benjamin Pratnemer, Brian Raman, Franz Roetzsch, Jeffrey Sparidaans, Jimmy van Schie

We'll see how that goes. Usually it does not go well. Will be back tomorrow to confirm the 2nd/3rd Division lineups for 2026 once the PL announcement is in the bank. Really not sure where they're going to go with that, with quite a few players possibly playing themselves out of spots at the worlds, but we'll see. I just hope they don't snub Rock, that's the main one for me.

Friday, 2 January 2026

Final thoughts

Well, the semis kind of went how we thought, Littler winning super comfortably, then Gary was probably not as big a dog as the market thought, and but for some critical missed doubles, we might have been at 5-5, but we weren't, so oh well. As such, we go into a final where the projection is as follows:

72/84/80/79

This puts Littler at a near 4-1 on favourite. He is nowhere near a 4-1 on favourite in the market. This is EXACTLY what we saw last year against MvG. GvV is one of the few players that might be able to pressure Luke, but over this sort of game, it is just not happening anywhere near as often as the market thinks it will happen. Which is a shame, as I want Gian to win the match, but even in the form sample, Luke would be a bet. So we will bet the favourite, and expect to collect in 24 hours from now.