
Luke Humphries and Luke Littler remain on a collision course with the Players Championship final after reaching the quarter-finals on Saturday.
The second and third rounds took place in a bumper on the second day at Minehead, with reigning champion Humphries continuing his title defense.
The world number one maintained his bid to win back-to-back Players Championship finals with wins over Raymond van Barneveld and Damon Heta, beating Gabriel Clemens in a dramatic opening match.
“I felt like I had a lot more to give there,” said Humphries, who is looking forward to a showdown with Littler if both players advance to Sunday’s final.
“Luke is playing absolutely phenomenal darts right now. He’s probably the best player in the world right now, but I know he has the level to match.
“Hopefully we can get to the final and give the fans what they want, but we still have a few games to win before we can think about that. We can’t look too far into the future.”
After averaging 112.73 against Rob Cross on Friday evening, Littler continued his breathtaking form with dominant wins over Ritchie Edhouse and Danny Noppert.
The newly crowned Grand Slam champion won a stunning tie with Edhouse, missing a nine-darter double of 12 in a contest in which both players averaged 105.
Littler then backed this up by beating former UK Open champion Noppert 10-3, averaging 104 and crashing seven 180s to extend his winning record to 10 matches.
“When I have these little outbursts, it feels like no one can touch me in between,” said Littler, who is currently ranked at a career high of No. 4 in the world.
“I’m really happy with the win. I played really well against Leach this afternoon and I felt comfortable tonight.”
The 17-year-old is back in contention for the last quarter-finals with World Grand Prix champion Mike De Decker after the Belgian conceded just four legs in Saturday’s double-header against Ian White and Niels Zonneveld.
Ross Smith also progressed to the final with 6-1 wins over Dimitri Van den Bergh and Wesley Plaisier before beating 2023 UK Open champion Andrew Gilding 10-1.
Smith will now face Scott Williams, who reached his second TV Rankings quarterfinal with a comeback win over 2012 runner-up Kim Huybrechts and Sweden’s Jeffrey de Graaf.
Elsewhere, 2023 semi-finalist Ryan Joyce survived four darts against Cameron Menzies before maintaining his impressive Minehead record with a 10-6 win over Martin Schindler to set up a quarter-final against Humphries.
Joyce survived four match darts to secure a dramatic second-round tie against Cameron Menzies, before beating German number one Martin Schindler 10-6 in the last 16.
Dirk van Duijvenbode continued his resurgence with clean wins over Florian Hempel and Jermaine Wattimena before setting up a quarter-final clash with Connor Scutt. Connor Scutt advanced ahead of Mario Vandenbogaerde and 2018 champion Daryl Gurney.
Earlier in the day, world number three Michael Smith suffered a second round exit against Gurney, while Dave Chisnall and Nathan Aspinall were also eliminated at the same stage.
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