Winmau World Masters 2026: Where Nerve Meets Firepower

Four relentless days. No safety net.
The 2026 Winmau World Masters delivered darts at full throttle inside Arena MK, where set play stripped everything back to nerve, scoring power and bottle. With £500,000 on the line and a field stacked with champions and momentum players, this was a tournament that rewarded those willing to go after it and punished hesitation.
From early shock exits to a final that refused to blink not forget a magic nine dart finish, Milton Keynes staged a Masters defined by thin margins, heavy scoring and players backing their game when it counted.
Night One: Big Names Fall, Intent Declared
The tone was set immediately.
Damon Heta ripped up the script by dumping out five-time champion Michael van Gerwen, punishing missed doubles and never loosening his grip. At 63% on the outer ring and with three ton-plus finishes, Heta didn’t steal the win, he owned it.
If Heta made the statement, Gerwyn Price delivered the warning. Averaging 108.51 in a ruthless 3–0 demolition of James Hurrell, the Welshman brought pace, power and pressure in equal measure. Four 180s and a 13-dart opener underlined just how dangerous he can be when he hits top gear.
Wins for Clayton, Aspinall, Van Veen, Wade, Dobey and Anderson reinforced the message early doors: there was no soft side of the draw, and no space to feel your way in.
Thursday January 29
Round One
Chris Dobey 3-0 Jermaine Wattimena (2-1, 2-0, 2-1)
Gary Anderson 3-2 Niels Zonneveld (0-2, 2-0, 2-1, 1-2, 2-0)
James Wade 3-2 Madars Razma (1-2, 2-0, 2-0, 1-2, 2-0)
Nathan Aspinall 3-1 Shane McGuirk (1-2, 2-0, 2-0, 2-0)
Jonny Clayton 3-1 Wessel Nijman (1-2, 2-1, 2-0, 2-1)
Gerwyn Price 3-0 James Hurrell (2-1, 2-1, 2-0)
Damon Heta 3-1 Michael van Gerwen (2-0, 1-2, 2-1, 2-1)
Gian van Veen 3-1 Ryan Joyce (1-2, 2-0 2-0, 2-1)
Key Session Insights
180’s – 44
Highest Checkout – 161 (Jonny Clayton)
Highest Average – 108.51 (Gerwyn Price)

Night Two: Heavy Hitters Arrive
Friday belonged to the sport’s front men and they were tested.
Luke Littler was dragged deep by Mike De Decker, surviving a missed match dart before flipping the momentum and sweeping the decider. It wasn’t pretty, but it was tough and that mattered.
Defending champion Luke Humphries wasted no time reminding everyone why he owned the title, averaging north of 104 to overpower Dave Chisnall. A brutal mid-match burst, built on 11- and 12-dart legs, showed control under pressure.
The night also announced Luke Woodhouse in emphatic fashion. His 108.64 average against Martin Schindler was fearless, fluent and fully deserved; a player stepping into belief territory. Add wins for Noppert, Cross, Rock and Smith, and round two was loaded.
Friday January 30
Round One
Luke Woodhouse 3-0 Martin Schindler (2-0, 2-1, 2-0)
Ross Smith 3-1 Jimmy van Schie (2-1, 1-2, 2-1, 2-1)
Danny Noppert 3-1 Daryl Gurney (2-0, 1-2, 2-1, 2-1)
Rob Cross 3-1 Ryan Searle (2-0, 2-1, 1-2, 2-1)
Josh Rock 3-1 Connor Scutt (1-2, 2-0, 2-0, 2-0)
Luke Littler 3-2 Mike De Decker (2-1, 0-2, 0-2, 2-1, 2-0)
Luke Humphries 3-1 Dave Chisnall (1-2, 2-0, 2-1, 2-0)
Stephen Bunting 3-1 Jeffrey de Graaf (2-0, 0-2, 2-1, 2-0)
Key Session Insights
180’s – 56
Highest Checkout – 150 (Ross Smith)
Highest Average – 108.64 (Luke Woodhouse)

Night Three: Perfection Under Fire
Saturday brought the moment everyone will remember.
Luke Humphries hit perfection – a nine-dart leg via 180-180-141, then still had to scrap to survive. Woodhouse refused to roll over, dragging the match to a sudden-death leg before Humphries finally closed it with his last dart in hand. Elite darts. Real pressure.
Littler found another gear, averaging 107.88 to see off Ross Smith, while Josh Rock bullied his way past Rob Cross to tee up a heavyweight quarter-final.
Elsewhere, Price edged Clayton, Noppert shut out Bunting, Van Veen impressed again, Wade dug deep, and Dobey held nerve. Experience met hunger. Nobody cruised.
Saturday January 31
Afternoon Session
Round Two x4
Chris Dobey 4-3 Damon Heta (1-2, 2-1, 2-0, 2-0, 0-2, 0-2, 2-0)
James Wade 4-3 Gary Anderson (0-2,1-2, 2-1, 2-0, 2-1, 1-2, 2-1)
Gian van Veen 4-2 Nathan Aspinall (1-2, 2-1, 2-1, 2-0, 0-2, 2-0)
Gerwyn Price 4-3 Jonny Clayton (1-2, 0-2, 2-0, 2-1, 2-0, 1-2, 2-1)
Evening Session
Round Two x4
Josh Rock 4-1 Rob Cross (2-1, 0-2, 2-1, 2-0 2-0)
Danny Noppert 4-0 Stephen Bunting (2-0, 2-0, 2-1, 2-0)
Luke Littler 4-1 Ross Smith (2-1, 2-0, 2-0, 1-2, 2-1)
Luke Humphries 4-3 Luke Woodhouse (2-0, 2-0, 1-2, 2-0, 1-2, 1-2, 2-1)
Key Session Insights
180’s – 99
Highest Checkout – 161 (Gerwyn Price)
Highest Average – 107.88 (Luke Littler)

Finals Day: Littler Takes It the Hard Way
Sunday delivered a final that refused to settle.
Luke Littler vs Luke Humphries, the sport’s defining rivalry – lived up to everything it promised. Humphries dragged himself from 3–1 down to lead 5–4, averaging 105.51 and applying suffocating pressure. Littler didn’t flinch.
Back against the wall, the world number one found 13- and 12-dart legs when there was nowhere left to hide, forcing a deciding set before closing it out to claim his first Winmau World Masters crown.
It was a title earned the hard way. Littler rode out early danger, survived match darts, took down Rock and Price head-on, and delivered with total control when the finish line came into view.
Humphries would have lifted the trophy in most years. Five matches at a ton-plus, a nine-darter, and two Finals Day whitewashes spoke to the level he brought but at this end of the sport, the smallest moments still decide everything.

Winmau Junior World Masters: The Next Wave Hits Hard
The next generation showed its quality through execution, discipline and the ability to deliver when it mattered.
Kaya Baysal produced a composed, controlled performance to defeat Mitchell Lawrie 2–0 and lift the Junior World Masters title. Averaging 89.37 and finishing clinically, Baysal turned the tables on last month’s Junior World Championship final.
His route to the title was ruthless! Unbeaten in sets on Saturday, 100+ averages in the latter rounds and a reminder that the next generation isn’t waiting.
A Tournament That Demanded Everything
The 2026 Winmau World Masters wasn’t about reputation, it was about delivery.
Set play exposed every lapse and pressure punished hesitation. Across four days, only players willing to lean into moments survived.
The numbers told the same story: 294 maximums, up from 214 in 2025, another step forward in the sport’s relentless scoring evolution.
With the Blade X making its world-stage debut, players were given a platform that held firm under sustained punishment. Delivering a precise, consistent playing surface capable of withstanding elite-level intensity
This was the Winmau World Masters in full voice, proving that reputation fades once the first dart is thrown, the next generation is already operating at a level to trouble anyone on the circuit, and execution under pressure remains the ultimate separator.
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