Luke Littler edged Luke Humphries 6-5 in the Night 13 Premier League final in Aberdeen – a result that pushed the 19-year-old to the top of the table.
The match was the first time this season the world’s top two met in a final. It unfolded as a tight, momentum-swapping contest that Littler ultimately closed out with three consecutive legs.
How the match played out
Littler opened the final with an 11-dart leg, setting the tone for a high-quality start.
Humphries answered with heavy scoring and a clinical 130 checkout to level the early exchanges. He later produced a 10-dart leg that put him ahead 4-3.
At that point, Humphries was a single hold of throw from victory, but Littler was not about to let the match slip away and reeled off the last three legs to complete a comeback.
The finish was compact and efficient rather than theatrical. As always, Littler simply found the doubles when it mattered.
Stakes and context
Beyond the single-night glory, the result had immediate table implications.
Littler’s win was his fifth nightly victory of the campaign and moved him clear at the summit of the Premier League standings.
The broader picture of the race for Finals Night at The O2 tightened as Gian van Veen and Luke Humphries closed the gap on Michael van Gerwen.
This left the final qualification spots still very much in play with only a few nights remaining. Jonny Clayton had already secured his place alongside Littler.
Style and temperament
What stood out was Littler’s composure under pressure.
When the match tilted in Humphries’ favour at 4-3, Littler didn’t panic. He tightened his scoring and converted the chances that came his way.
The Aberdeen crowd’s reaction to Littler – including boos during his walk-on – added an edge to the night. But it didn’t change the fundamentals at all. Littler’s scoring and finishing were the decisive factors.
Humphries produced moments of brilliance, including that 130 finish. But he could not halt Littler’s late surge.
Night highlights beyond the final
The evening also featured notable results that reshaped the chase for the play-offs.
Gian van Veen beat Jonny Clayton in the quarters and boosted his hopes, though he lost to Humphries in the semis.
Van Gerwen’s position was dented by results elsewhere, and Gerwyn Price picked up points in a tight quarter-final win over Stephen Bunting.
Josh Rock and Bunting sit lower in the table and look increasingly unlikely to make the cut. Those permutations mean every remaining night will carry extra weight for the chasing pack.
What it means next
Littler’s victory is more than a single-night headline; it is a statement about consistency and temperament.
He has shown an ability to close out matches, even when momentum swings against him. That trait is proving crucial in a league where small margins decide who reaches The O2.
For Humphries, the loss is a small setback but not a season-ender. He remains in the hunt and showed enough quality to suggest he can respond.
For the neutral observer, Aberdeen delivered a compact, high-stakes match that hinged on finishing rather than flash.
Final word
The final in Aberdeen was tight, tidy, and decided by the player who handled the closing moments best.
Littler’s comeback to win 6-5 was a reminder that, in Premier League darts, the scoreboard rarely tells the whole story until the final dart is thrown.
The league table has shifted yet again, and the play-off race is heating up. Consequently, the next nights will matter even more.












