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Broadcasts
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The tournament is being broadcast by Sky Sports in the United Kingdom and Ireland; the World Championship acts as the first event of the PDC and Sky Sports's new five-year broadcast deal. Other broadcasters include Viaplay in the Netherlands and the Nordic countries; DAZN in Germany, Austria and Switzerland; Sport1 in Germany; VTM in Belgium; Fox Sports in Australia; Sky Sport in New Zealand; L'Équipe in France; Pragosport in Hungary; Nova Sport in Czechia and Slovakia; Peacock and FanDuel TV Extra in the United States; BeIN Sports in the Middle East and North Africa; Maincast in Ukraine; SPTV and ZonaSport in Croatia; StarHub TV in Singapore; TVP Sport in Poland; Rigour in China; Arena Sport in Serbia, Bosnia and Herzegovina, North Macedonia, Montenegro and Kosovo; TV3 in the Baltic states; Saran in Turkey; and Premier Sports Network in Mongolia.
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The tournament is also available on the PDC's streaming service, PDCTV, for subscribers outside of the United Kingdom, Ireland, Germany, Austria and Switzerland. Talksport is providing live commentary for the event, which features former professional players Paul Nicholson and Chris Mason.
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Qualification
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The 128-player field comprised three sets of qualification routes. The top 40 players on the two-year PDC Order of Merit after the 2025 Players Championship Finals qualified automatically, followed by the next 40 highest-ranked players on the one-year PDC Pro Tour Order of Merit. The remaining 48 places went to various international qualifiers. A record total of 28 players made their PDC World Championship debut.
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Background
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Order of Merit qualifiers
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There were 40 players who qualified for the tournament by virtue of being ranked in the top 40 of the PDC Order of Merit. Defending champion Luke Littler is the number one seed for the tournament, having achieved world number one status on his way to winning the 2025 Grand Slam. He entered the World Championship off the back of claiming his sixth major title of 2025 at the Players Championship Finals; his other titles included the last World Championship, the World Matchplay and his second Grand Slam. Luke Humphries, the 2024 world champion and previous world number one, is the second seed. He won two major titles, the World Masters and the Premier League, during the season. The third seed is three-time world champion Michael van Gerwen, who ended a two-year major title drought by winning the World Series Finals in September. Stephen Bunting, a two-time World Championship semi-finalist and former BDO world champion, is the fourth seed. Welsh number one Jonny Clayton and 2022 UK Open champion Danny Noppert are the fifth and sixth seeds, while four-time World Championship semi-finalist James Wade is seeded seventh in his 22nd appearance at the tournament. Chris Dobey, a 2025 semi-finalist, and 2021 world champion Gerwyn Price completed the top ten alongside tenth seed Gian van Veen, who achieved his first major title at the European Championship and retained his World Youth Championship during the year.
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Former world champions Gary Anderson, Rob Cross, Michael Smith and Peter Wright are all amongst the seeded players. Josh Rock and Daryl Gurney, who won the World Cup for Northern Ireland, are the 11th and 22nd seeds. Nathan Aspinall, the most prolific player on the 2025 European Tour with three titles, is the 15th seed after finishing as runner-up to Littler at the Players Championship Finals. Jermaine Wattimena, the 19th seed, claimed his first two PDC ranking titles in 2025 Players Championship events. Former major champions who are also seeded include 2022 European champion Ross Smith, 2024 World Grand Prix champion Mike De Decker, 2020 World Matchplay champion Dimitri Van den Bergh, 2024 European champion Ritchie Edhouse and 2022 Masters champion Joe Cullen; Cullen secured the 32nd and final seeded position. Outside of the top 32 seeds, eight more players qualified through the PDC Order of Merit and were unseeded in the tournament draw, including five-time world champion Raymond van Barneveld who will make his 33rd World Championship appearance across both the PDC and BDO tournaments, as well as 2023 UK Open champion Andrew Gilding.
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Pro Tour qualifiers
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There were 40 players who qualified for the tournament as the 40 highest-ranked players on the PDC Pro Tour Order of Merit who had not yet qualified. The list was topped by Niko Springer, who won his first PDC ranking title at the Hungarian Darts Trophy. Other first-time title winners to qualify through the Pro Tour were Bradley Brooks, Jeffrey de Graaf and Sebastian Białecki. Max Hopp, the 2015 World Youth champion, made his first appearance at the World Championship since the 2021 event. Former semi-finalist Gabriel Clemens was joined by former quarter-finalists Callan Rydz, Ian White, Kim Huybrechts and Darius Labanauskas. Ireland's 2019 World Cup finalists William O'Connor and Steve Lennon both qualified. Development Tour winner Cam Crabtree and Grand Slam quarter-finalist Lukas Wenig were among the players to qualify for their maiden World Championship.
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International qualifiers
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There were 48 players who qualified for the tournament through international qualifiers. Three-time women's world champion Beau Greaves made her second appearance at the PDC World Championship after her debut at the 2023 event, having declined to participate in the last two editions in favour of competing in the WDF World Championship. A minimum of four women were guaranteed to participate in the tournament as part of the new World Championship qualification structure. Along with Greaves, Women's World Matchplay champion Lisa Ashton and Women's Series players Fallon Sherrock, Noa-Lynn van Leuven and Gemma Hayter qualified. Sherrock entered as the only woman to have won matches at the tournament, while Van Leuven remained the only transgender player in the event's history.
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Paul Lim, who finished fifth on the 2025 PDC Asian Tour, qualified for his first PDC World Championship since the 2022 edition; at age 71, he extended his record as the oldest player to compete at the event. Simon Whitlock, who finished as runner-up at the 2010 World Championship, confirmed his comeback by winning the newly-established ANZ Premier League, having missed the last World Championship to end a 15-year participation streak. Whitlock, Tim Pusey and Joe Comito comprised the Australian contingent to qualify, alongside seeded player Damon Heta. Spain's Cristo Reyes secured his return to the World Championship by winning the Mediterranean qualifier, having last competed at the 2020 edition.
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Kenya and Argentina were represented for the first time after David Munyua and Jesús Salate earned their places in the tournament. The final five places at the World Championship went to the successful players from the Tour Card holder qualifier: 2020 Grand Slam champion José de Sousa, Tavis Dudeney, Adam Hunt, Stephen Burton and Haupai Puha.
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The international qualifiers were invited in the following order:
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Originally a qualification route
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List of qualifiers
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The following players qualified for the tournament. Their placement in the tournament is shown in parentheses.
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Summary
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First round
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The first round (best of five sets) took place from 11 to 19 December. Luke Littler opened his title defence with a 3–0 victory over Darius Labanauskas. The first two sets of the match were played to deciding legs, which Littler won, before also claiming the third set. Littler admitted being nervous for his opening match, which he called "the hardest game" of the tournament to play. Michael Smith, the 2023 world champion, defeated Lisa Ashton 3–0 in what he deemed "not a great game". After a year of dealing with injuries, Smith said: "That is the first time I felt 100 per cent this year, but I didn't play 100 per cent. It's hard coming the first night, I am glad to be through." German debutant Arno Merk won the opening match of the tournament by beating Kim Huybrechts 3–1, while Madars Razma closed the opening day by defeating Dutch debutant Jamai van den Herik by the same scoreline. Rob Cross, the 2018 world champion, hit a 170 checkout in the final leg of his 3–0 win against Cor Dekker. In his third World Championship appearance, Gian van Veen earned his first win at the tournament by defeating Cristo Reyes 3–1. Twelfth seed Ross Smith was the first seeded player to be eliminated, losing 3–2 to Swedish debutant Andreas Harrysson; Smith missed six match darts in the fourth set to win 3–1, allowing Harrysson to level the score and win the deciding set.
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Luke Humphries, the 2024 world champion, won his opening match 3–1 against Ted Evetts. Already the oldest player to compete at the event, 71-year-old Paul Lim became the oldest player to win a PDC World Championship match by defeating Jeffrey de Graaf 3–1; he beat the previous record held by John MaGowan, who was 67 when he won a match at the 2009 World Championship. Humphries and Lim's wins set up a match between the pair in the second round—a rematch of their 2021 World Championship meeting, which Lim won 3–2. Lim praised Humphries's ability in his post-match interview but claimed that he "can be beaten", while Humphries recounted his friendly interactions with Lim since their match, adding: "The crowd will be against me and if I don't play well, he will fancy his chances." World number 84 Adam Hunt took a 2–1 lead against two-time world champion Gary Anderson, but Anderson claimed the next two sets to win 3–2. "That's probably the best Adam [Hunt] has played all season" said Anderson. Gabriel Clemens converted a 170 checkout in the second leg of his match against Alex Spellman and went on to win 3–0, only conceding one leg throughout the contest.
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Fourth seed Stephen Bunting established a two-set lead over Sebastian Białecki, who then won six of the next seven legs to bring the score to 2–2. With the deciding set level at 2–2 in legs, Bunting and Białecki were the first pair of the tournament to enter a tie-break, where Bunting earned the two clear legs required to win the set 4–2 and the match 3–2. Dimitri Van den Bergh, a semi-finalist at the 2023 World Championship, missed 16 out of 17 attempts at double as he lost 3–0 to Scottish debutant Darren Beveridge. Competing in his fifth PDC World Championship, Nitin Kumar became the first Indian player to win a match at the event, beating Richard Veenstra 3–2. Kumar, who hit 75 per cent of his darts at double, said he was "willing to be the puppet" for inspired Indian players, while Sky Sports commentator Glen Durrant called the match "one of the greatest games [he had] ever commentated on". The 2024 European Championship winner Ritchie Edhouse lost 3–0 to Jonny Tata, who was the first player from New Zealand to win at the event since the 2019 World Championship.
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Fifth seed Jonny Clayton progressed to the second round by beating Adam Lipscombe 3–1. Number 26 seed Cameron Menzies led 2–1 against 20-year-old English debutant Charlie Manby, but Manby came back to claim a 3–2 victory. As Manby celebrated, Menzies began punching the underside of a drinks table on stage out of frustration, cutting his right hand open in the process. He was subsequently taken to hospital. Menzies later apologised for his behaviour, revealing that his uncle had recently died but that it was "no excuse for what [he] did on the stage". In a statement, PDC chief executive Matt Porter said: "Any incident of this nature is reported to the Darts Regulation Authority for review, but our main priority is the player's health and wellbeing." Two-time world champion Peter Wright defeated Noa-Lynn van Leuven 3–0 but admitted he was unhappy with how he played, believing he was "not transferring [his practice] on the big stage". The 2010 World Championship runner-up Simon Whitlock forced a deciding set against Connor Scutt after initially going 2–0 down; Whitlock took the first leg of the set before Scutt took the next three for a 3–2 win. Dirk van Duijvenbode and Andy Baetens also went to a deciding set, where Van Duijvenbode hit a 170 checkout in the first leg and went on to win the set and the match. Max Hopp marked his return to the World Championship after five years by defeating Martin Lukeman 3–1. Brendan Dolan won the second set of his match against Tavis Dudeney with a 170 checkout before clinching a 3–1 victory.
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Gerwyn Price, the 2021 world champion, began his campaign by defeating Adam Gawlas 3–0. Price thanked the crowd for cheering him on and said that he "[doesn't] usually get this [crowd support]". Sky Sports pundit Wayne Mardle stated that Price's scoring during the match was "outrageous" and that he looked like "a million dollars". Following losses in his opening match at the previous two World Championships, sixth seed Danny Noppert was a 3–1 winner over Dutch compatriot Jurjen van der Velde. Chris Dobey defeated Xiaochen Zong by the same scoreline. Australia's Joe Comito earned an 3–1 upset victory against Niko Springer. Alan Soutar and Teemu Harju missed a total of 19 match darts—15 from Soutar and 4 from Harju—on their way to the first sudden death leg of the tournament, where Soutar hit double 16 to prevail. The 2020 Grand Slam champion José de Sousa officially lost his PDC Tour Card following his 3–1 loss to Ricardo Pietreczko. Seventh seed James Wade achieved his first win at the tournament since the 2022 World Championship, defeating Ryusei Azemoto 3–0. Raymond van Barneveld, the 2007 world champion and four-time BDO World Championship winner, lost 3–0 to Stefan Bellmont, who become the first Swiss player to win a match in the event's history.
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Three-time world champion Michael van Gerwen lost the opening set of his match against Japanese debutant Mitsuhiko Tatsunami, but won the next three to claim a 3–1 victory. "It was really difficult, I don't know what happened" commented Van Gerwen, who remarked that Tatsunami made him "work really hard" for the win. African qualifier David Munyua, the first Kenyan representative in PDC World Championship history, earned a shock victory against the 2024 World Grand Prix champion and 18th seed Mike De Decker. After winning the first two sets, De Decker missed three match darts to win 3–1 and Munyua capitalised by levelling the score at 2–2. In the deciding set, Munyua landed a 135 checkout before completing a 3–2 comeback win. Japanese debutant Motomu Sakai defeated Thibault Tricole 3–0 in another upset win. Sky Sports pundit Mark Webster said that the debuting players had "done themselves more than justice" with their performances, stating that Munyua's victory was "what the World Championship is about". Fallon Sherrock, the first woman to win a PDC World Championship match, lost 3–0 to Dave Chisnall. Dominik Grüllich led 2–1 against the 19th seed Jermaine Wattimena, but Wattimena overturned the deficit to win 3–2. Krzysztof Ratajski converted a 170 checkout on his way to beating Alexis Toylo 3–0.
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Making her second PDC World Championship appearance, Beau Greaves went to a deciding set with 22nd seed Daryl Gurney. Gurney converted a 144 checkout in the third leg of the set before winning the next leg to seal a 3–2 victory, despite Greaves winning more legs throughout the match. Gurney praised Greaves after the match and called her "the best woman darts player on the planet". He also predicted that she was "going to be a force to be reckoned with" and that she would "win some PDC tournaments" in 2026. Nathan Aspinall won 3–1 against Lourence Ilagan after losing the opening set, completing the victory with a 170 checkout. Gemma Hayter clinched a set against 11th seed Josh Rock before losing 3–1. Rock admitted to underestimating Hayter, later declaring: "When it comes to round two against Joe Comito, I will not perform like that, I assure you." William O'Connor produced the highest three-dart average of the first round as he averaged 102.36 to defeat Krzysztof Kciuk 3–0. Keane Barry was the last player to advance, beating Tim Pusey 3–0 in the final match of the round.
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Second round
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The second round (best of five sets) took place from 20 to 23 December and was the final round before the Christmas break. Before the start of the second round, Dom Taylor was suspended by the Darts Regulation Authority (DRA) after failing a drug test, which was conducted on the same day he won his first-round match 3–0 against Oskar Lukasiak. He was removed from the tournament and his scheduled opponent, Jonny Clayton, received a bye to the third round. Four of the six seeded players that competed on 20 December were eliminated. The 28th seed Michael Smith was beaten 3–1 by Niels Zonneveld, who said "I think this is the biggest victory of my life" in response to defeating the former world champion. Andrew Gilding won 3–1 against eighth seed Chris Dobey, marking the first time Dobey had failed to reach the third round since 2018. The 21st seed Dave Chisnall hit 11 maximums as he recovered from 2–0 down against Ricardo Pietreczko, but missed a match dart before Pietreczko secured victory in a tie-break. James Hurrell also won in a deciding set, earning a 3–2 upset win over 29th seed Dirk van Duijvenbode. Seeded players Stephen Bunting and Ryan Searle were 3–0 winners over Nitin Kumar and Brendan Dolan, respectively. Andreas Harrysson continued his debut campaign by defeating Motomu Sakai 3–0.
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Welsh debutant David Davies missed darts at double to win the opening set of his match with Luke Littler; Littler later claimed a 3–0 victory. On his opponent's missed doubles, Littler said: "If he hit them, it was a complete different game, but I'm glad he missed." Ninth seed Gerwyn Price suffered a shock 3–0 loss to world number 92 Wesley Plaisier. Plaisier stated that it was "by far [his] biggest win ever" and that he "couldn't imagine beating" Price. Mensur Suljović went 1–0 down against 32nd seed Joe Cullen, who hit a 170 checkout, but Suljović won the next three sets for a 3–1 victory. Cullen was visibly unhappy with his opponent's slow style of play during the match and believed it was intentional, posting on social media: "The old guard will say it's part of the game but word it how you will – it's cheating. That's not darts." Suljović denied accusations of cheating, claiming he "never, ever [plays slowly] as a provocation". His win set up a third-round tie against Littler, who revealed that Suljović sent him a message when the tournament draw was conducted that said "See you in round three". Martin Schindler defeated Keane Barry 3–0 in a match where all sets went to a deciding leg. Stefan Bellmont led 1–0 and 2–1 against Damon Heta but Heta ultimately won 3–2. Rob Cross defeated Ian White 3–1, Luke Woodhouse beat Max Hopp 3–0, and Krzysztof Ratajski eliminated 24th seed Ryan Joyce with a 3–1 win.
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Luke Humphries won the first eight legs against Paul Lim. Lim clinched his sole leg of the match before Humphries sealed a 3–0 win. Humphries professed that he did not want to "destroy" Lim 9–0 in legs and he was happy to see Lim avoid a full whitewash defeat. Alan Soutar missed a dart to go 2–0 ahead against Gian van Veen, who hit a 170 checkout on his way to winning 3–1 with a three-dart average of 108.28. Nathan Aspinall defeated Leonard Gates 3–0 in a rematch of their meeting the previous year. Ricky Evans reached the third round for the third consecutive year by beating seventh seed James Wade 3–2. Wade converted a 170 checkout but fell 2–1 behind to Evans, before a successful fourth set from Wade saw the match go to a deciding set. Evans missed seven match darts and Wade missed one as the pair went to a tie-break, where Evans won the set 6–4 in legs with a 99 checkout. "My sister hit that double for me there" said Evans, whose sister died in March 2025. Kevin Doets defeated David Munyua 3–0 to end the Kenyan's run, while Charlie Manby beat fellow debutant Adam Sevada by the same scoreline. Gabriel Clemens earned a 3–0 victory against 31st seed Wessel Nijman and Madars Razma defeated Darren Beveridge 3–1.
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Michael van Gerwen rebounded from his first-round performance by defeating William O'Connor 3–1. Danny Noppert trailed English debutant and world number 86 Justin Hood 2–0, but won the next two sets after Hood missed the bullseye for a 3–0 victory. In the deciding set, Noppert missed a match dart but landed checkouts of 157 and 127 as the pair entered a sudden-death leg, which Hood won with a 78 finish. The match, in which both players averaged over 102, was noted for its high quality and dramatic play. Gary Anderson registered a three-dart average of 105.41 and hit nine maximums in his 3–1 victory over Connor Scutt. Arno Merk advanced to the third round with a 3–0 win against Peter Wright, who only averaged 79.20. When asked about Wright's defeat, Van Gerwen commented that he was not surprised and believed it was "time for [Wright] to retire anyway", while Anderson said his fellow Scottish world champion needed to be given "a bit of time". Two-time quarter-finalist Callan Rydz converted two 167 checkouts on his way to defeating Daryl Gurney 3–2 in a tie-break. Ryan Meikle became the second player of the tournament to overturn a two-set deficit as he completed a 3–2 comeback victory against Jonny Tata; 2024 semi-finalist Scott Williams attempted the same feat but lost in a deciding set to Jermaine Wattimena. The final match of the second round saw Josh Rock defeat Joe Comito 3–0. By the end of the second round, 17 of the 32 seeds had been eliminated from the tournament.
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Third round
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The third round (best of seven sets) took place from 27 to 29 December. Luke Littler dropped three legs as he defeated Mensur Suljović 4–0, not allowing Suljović to have a dart at double in the first seven legs of the match. Littler recorded a three-dart average of 107.09 and converted 71 per cent of his double attempts. Speaking after the match, he said that he was settled and believed it was the best he had felt at the World Championship. James Hurrell produced another upset victory by beating fourth seed Stephen Bunting 4–3, defying checkouts of 161 and 121 in deciding legs from Bunting to win the match in a decider. Hurrell called it "the biggest win of [his] career", later saying "I've just beaten the number four in the world. I'm not bothered who I face next" when asked about his potential fourth-round opponents. After a 12-day break, Jonny Clayton prevailed in a deciding set against Niels Zonneveld to advance to the last 16 stage for a fifth successive year. Krzysztof Ratajski recovered from 3–1 down to complete a 4–3 comeback victory over Wesley Plaisier, who missed three match darts in the sixth set. Luke Woodhouse defeated Andrew Gilding 4–1 to reach the fourth round for the second straight year, while Andreas Harryson beat Ricardo Pietreczko 4–2.
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After losing the first three sets of his match against Luke Humphries, Gabriel Clemens found his way back into the tie by winning the fourth and fifth sets, despite a 170 checkout from Humphries during the latter. Clemens had the opportunity to take the match to a deciding set but squandered three darts at double. Humphries halted his opponent's comeback with an 81 checkout on double 13 to win 4–2. Despite the defeat, Clemens became the first German player to average over 100 at the World Championship. Humphries expressed his surprise at his opponent's "onslaught", calling him "the better player in the last three sets". Gary Anderson missed four match darts as he was brought to a deciding set by Jermaine Wattimena. Moving into a tie-break scenario, Anderson attempted a nine-dart finish in the seventh leg but missed the final dart needed at double 12, before winning the set 5–3 in legs for a 4–3 victory—the same scoreline as the pair's third-round meeting at the 2019 World Championship. Anderson joked that he was "getting palpitations, never mind flashbacks" and claimed he "bottled" his shot at the nine-dart finish. Anderson's win set up a fourth-round tie against Michael van Gerwen, who defeated Arno Merk 4–1. Gian van Veen advanced to the next round with a 4–1 win against Madars Razma. Ryan Searle failed to lose a set for the third match in a row as he defeated Martin Schindler 4–0, while Rob Cross beat Damon Heta by the same scoreline to set up a meeting with Luke Littler.
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Callan Rydz won the opening set against Josh Rock before Rock claimed four consecutive sets to win 4–1. After the match, Rock offered his condolences to Rydz and his family following the death of his grandfather. Nathan Aspinall, the 15th seed, landed his second 170 checkout of the tournament to take a 3–2 lead against Kevin Doets, but Doets responded by winning the last six legs of the match for a 4–3 victory—his sixth straight win against Aspinall. Charlie Manby and Justin Hood continued their respective debut campaigns, with Manby defeating Ricky Evans 4–2—Evans's seventh loss in the round of 32—and Hood beating Ryan Meikle 4–1. "It's crazy to be in the last 16" stated Manby, who progressed to a fourth-round tie against "good mate" Gian van Veen.
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Fourth round
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