Stephen Bunting ended his
2026 Premier League Darts campaign with one of his best nights of the season, defeating
Luke Humphries 6-3 in the final in Sheffield to claim the last weekly title of the regular league phase.
The Bullet averaged 106.37 in a high-quality final at the Utilita Arena, with Humphries also above the ton mark at 102.23, but Bunting’s scoring bursts and finishing power proved decisive.
The victory secured Bunting fifth place in the final table, even though his late surge came too late to force his way into Finals Night at the O2.
For Humphries, defeat in the final did not undo the bigger picture of the evening. His semi-final win over
Luke Littler secured third place in the final standings, meaning the reigning Premier League champion will face
Jonny Clayton in London, while Littler takes on
Gerwyn Price.
How they reached the final
Bunting’s route to the final began with one of his best results of the campaign, as he beat Clayton 6-3 in the opening quarter-final. Clayton averaged 104.90, hit back with a 101 finish and had a burst of back-to-back maximums in leg four, but Bunting stayed composed and punished key openings, including a 102 checkout in leg five before closing the match on D12.
His semi-final win over Price was even more eye-catching. Price started sharply, opening with a 180 and moving 2-0 ahead, but Bunting worked his way into the contest before taking control with a superb run of finishing. A 161 checkout gave him the lead for the first time, a 100 finish moved him to the brink, and a 104 checkout on D18 sealed a 6-3 victory and completed a hat-trick of ton-plus finishes.
That semi-final also had one of the night’s more unusual moments when a whistler interrupted play while Bunting was throwing. Price immediately paused the match, pointed out the spectator to security, and ensured they were removed before play continued. Once the darts resumed, Bunting settled quickest and went on to take charge.
Humphries reached the final through two very different matches. First, he edged
Michael van Gerwen 6-5 in the last quarter-final of the night, surviving a tense decider after Van Gerwen wired the bull for a 164 checkout. Humphries stepped in on D16 to win it, keeping his strong late-season run alive and ending Van Gerwen’s Premier League campaign with another narrow defeat.
He then produced one of his most dominant performances of the campaign against Littler. After dropping the opening leg, Humphries reeled off six in a row to win 6-1, hitting four 180s and closing the match with an 87 checkout on D9. The victory sent him into a fourth consecutive weekly final and, more importantly, secured third place in the final league table.
Bunting overpowers Humphries in Sheffield final
Bunting made the stronger start in the final and immediately threatened something special. He opened the first leg with four perfect darts, later added a second maximum to leave 58, and survived a scare when Humphries wired the bull for a 161 checkout. Bunting returned on D10 to hold throw.
The break followed quickly. A 41 finish on D16 moved Bunting 2-0 ahead, before a clinical 78 checkout on tops made it 3-0 and put Humphries under immediate pressure.
Humphries finally got on the board with a 52 finish, but Bunting’s scoring continued to set the tone. His fifth maximum of the final pushed his average towards 115, and although he missed darts at D12 and D6, he was allowed back to restore a 4-1 lead.
The best Humphries moment came in leg six. With the Sheffield crowd aiming anti-Leeds United chants in his direction, he produced a brilliant 132 checkout on the bullseye, earning a fist bump of respect from Bunting as he cut the gap to 4-2.
Bunting responded with a clean two-dart 80 finish on D10 to move 5-2 ahead. Humphries stayed alive on D8 after Bunting made a mess of 90, but the comeback never truly gathered pace.
In the ninth leg, Bunting again threatened a perfect finish to his Premier League season, opening with six treble 20s before dart seven ended the nine-dart bid. He still returned to clean up 41 on D8,
sealing a 6-3 win and ending his campaign with a second nightly title.
Roundup of the other stories
With the play-off quartet already confirmed before a dart was thrown in Sheffield, the final regular league night was less about qualification and more about positioning, momentum and closing statements before the O2.
Littler’s push for a record-breaking seventh nightly win of the campaign ended abruptly in the semi-finals. He still finishes the league phase comfortably top of the table after a dominant campaign, but his defeat to Humphries confirmed the final play-off bracket and denied him one last weekly title before London.
Clayton’s regular season ended with a quarter-final defeat, but his second-place finish was already secure. That means he heads to London as the man directly behind Littler in the standings after a league phase built on consistency, four nightly wins and repeated deep runs.
Price’s Sheffield night brought a strong opening win over Van Veen before defeat in the semi-finals, leaving him fourth in the final table despite going into the evening level on points with Humphries. The Welshman is still safely through to the O2, but the final ordering means he is now set for a semi-final against Littler.
For Van Gerwen, the campaign ended in fittingly frustrating fashion. Already out of the play-off race, he still had the chance to finish with a statement win over Humphries, but another deciding-leg defeat summed up a Premier League season in which too many narrow margins went against him.
Van Veen also bows out outside the top four after a debut campaign that had its moments without quite delivering enough late pressure, while Rock ends bottom of the table despite again showing flashes of the scoring power that made him such an intriguing Premier League pick.
The O2 line-up is now clear. Littler, Clayton, Humphries and Price will fight for the title in London, with Sheffield sharpening the semi-final picture rather than changing the cast.