Is darts the best sport in the world? If it isn’t, it’s certainly a heavyweight contender and it’s bang in form, with the coming of the current golden age confirmed during the extraordinary 2024 PDC World Championship. Game of Throws, a three-part reminiscence about those three dramatic weeks in London a year ago, successfully bottles the moment.
More of a collective mania than a game, darts asks participants to throw tiny metal spikes at targets the width of a fingertip from more than two metres away, a ludicrously difficult discipline that requires years of diligent practice. Wins and losses are measured in millimetres. So one might expect elite tournaments to take place in a reverential hush, like chess or snooker. But no: the major career landmarks of darts pros happen in cacophonous halls full of drunk punters in fancy dress.
Game of Throws correctly celebrates darts as a working-class festival, a supersize cartoon of the ideal British pub: somehow the blokes in the corner, playing a fiendish game to impossible standards, fit right in to a room stuffed with steaming revellers. The crowd at Alexandra Palace, home of the PDC, are silly and free, turning up to the party dressed as chickens, superheroes, penguins and Uncle Albert from Only Fools and Horses; uniquely in sport, the most popular chant, bellowed while the players are trying to concentrate, is “stand up if you love the darts”, a song for the shared experience rather than any particular player.
That this jubilant anarchy enhances the game rather than spoiling it is a miracle because, for the players, darts is unforgiving. Game of Throws starts by following Kevin Doets, a part-timer from the Netherlands who checks into a poky Airbnb not far from the venue before his first-round match, where defeat will mean the loss of his professional tour card. Victory, meanwhile, promises the sum of £15,000. Steeling himself as his anxious father and bullish mother look on, Doets wins.
Modern darts has been known to break its big stars. An admirably frank interview is given in the second episode by James “the Machine” Wade, whose diagnosis of attention deficit hyperactivity disorder and bipolar disorder has helped to explain two occasions in televised matches where he clouded over, lost the will to throw and ended the game in tearful defeat. For Nathan “the Asp” Aspinall, problems with his wrist and back – darts may not look like a physical test, but you try leaning forward on one leg for hours at a time – have been compounded by “dartitis”, the sport’s equivalent of the “yips” in golf: a psychological condition where the brain refuses to let the hand release the dart.
Darts can be a dark place, although in a literal sense it’s a brightly lit place full of people in nun costumes carrying trays with 22 pints of beer on them. But the mental battles are what make it compelling. To throw without wavering demands total self-belief. Maintaining that is supremely hard, which creates a singular, lurching suspense, especially when the sport is blessed with a talented generation of players.
As the 2024 championship begins, the leader of the new generation is “Cool Hand” Luke Humphries, a mild-mannered 28-year-old from Crewe who has not won this title before, but has won every other big trophy in the season just gone. He lacks the outlandish charisma darts fans favour, but soon, Humphries is no longer the story. Among the unknown outsiders is Warrington’s Luke Littler, who is 16 years old at the time, a fact that becomes increasingly astounding as he progresses through the tournament, smashing established players to pieces.
With its juicy behind-the-scenes insights, Game of Throws is there for every small moment. Littler can be seen saying “wow” to himself the first time he looks out across a sea of happy, boozy people waiting for him to play. But his debut match has barely got going before the kid, having taken an unassailable lead, is putting on a show, waving in time to the “oy, oy, oy” of the crowd singing the darts anthem Chase the Sun, and celebrating hitting a double by miming heading a football into a net.
After the game, Littler’s dad, who spent years driving around Britain to youth competitions in the hope that his hunch about his son was correct, is as stunned as anyone: he knew his boy was good, but this is ridiculous. As Littler blazes towards his destined final against Humphries, beginning a rivalry that looks like it will define the sport for the next decade, we are there to see a superstar born – and to see darts take its game to a new level.
• Game of Throws: Inside Darts aired on Sky Documentaries and is on Now.