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Mike De Decker - beats Humphries to win World Grand Prix



Mike De Decker claims maiden major title at the World Grand Prix





Mike De Decker produced the performance of his life to secure a maiden major title at the 2024 World Grand Prix, dethroning Luke Humphries after an epic final in Leicester.

The Belgian star had progressed to his first televised final following a series of superb displays in the double-start tournament, and scooped the £120,000 top prize following a thrilling final.

Reigning champion Humphries was left shell-shocked as De Decker hit back from a set down to storm into a 4-1 lead in Sunday’s showpiece.

The world number one hit back with three straight sets of his own to draw level, but De Decker took set nine before closing out a remarkable victory in the deciding leg of set ten.

De Decker’s success makes him only the second Belgian – alongside Dimitri Van den Bergh – to lift a PDC major title, and catapults him from 36th to 25th on the PDC Order of Merit.

“I’m so proud,” said De Decker. “It feels amazing – I’m over the moon; I’ve been really happy with my performance all week, but this tops it off.


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“Luke has been a phenomenal champion for the last year and he’s such a nice person.

“The way Luke has been playing since last year is just brilliant and being the person that beats him this weekend, in a final, picking up this trophy; I’m so happy!

“I was cool in patches. In the beginning I was really nervous, then I calmed down and went 4-1 up. When he came back to 4-4 I started to get nervous again but I did it.”

Humphries had stormed into the final with an emphatic 5-0 whitewash of Ryan Joyce on Saturday – in which he averaged 100 – but De Decker’s superior doubling proved crucial in seeing his bid to retain the title fall just short.

“I’m obviously gutted to lose – I felt like I really was just on the wires of everything,” admitted Humphries.

“It frustrating but I’m so proud of Mike, he showed so much bottle. I know how it felt like to be in that position a year ago and he looked as cool as anything.

“It wasn’t my night and sometimes you have to accept that it isn’t – but you’ve got a great champion and he’s got a target on his back now like I’ve got.

“He’s a fantastic guy, a great player. There’s a lot more big things to come from him after this.”

The pair traded early 14-darters and Humphries landed a double-double 92 checkout in the opening set, which the reigning champion took with a 14-darter after De Decker missed double ten to take first blood.

The Belgian, though, defied a 105 checkout from Humphries to take the second set’s decider, punishing three misses from the World Champion with double 12 to level.

He then swept through set three with legs of 13, 14 and 15 darts before coming from a leg down to win the fourth with a stunning 154 combination.

De Decker then edged the fifth in another deciding leg to establish a three-set cushion, before taking a two-leg lead in set six.

Humphries, though, showed his quality to respond with back-to-back checkouts of 149 and 152 to save the set, before pinning double 16 to reduce the deficit to 4-2.

He then won set seven by a 3-1 margin, despite a 156 checkout from De Decker, and then recovered from a leg down to edge the eighth in a deciding leg as a 67 finish squared up the contest.

The pair shared the opening two legs of set nine, before De Decker pinned tops and then finished 80 to claim the set and move 5-4 up.

Humphries continued his battle and shared the first four legs of set ten – which included an 11-darter from De Decker – before the Belgian finished 55 on tops to complete a remarkable display and seal World Grand Prix glory.