LUKE LITTLER is back in Belgium at the scene of one of the most famous weekends of his meteoric darts career.
The teenage sensation won the 2024 iteration of the Belgian Darts Open after beating Rob Cross 8-7 in the final.
But that was only the end of a dramatic weekend for Littler in Belgium last year – The Nuke hit a brilliant nine-darter in the final to leave fans in no doubt about his incredible raw talent.
It was also the scene of his infamous clash with Ricardo Pietreczko, who branded the teenager “arrogant” during a heated semi-final.
Littler is now back and looking to continue his fine form following last weekend’s brilliant win over Luke Humphries at the UK Open.
How to watch the Belgian Darts Open 2025 and is there a live stream?
Who is playing in Belgian Darts Open 2025?
There are multiple ways players qualified for this tournament, those being:
Seeded players (16):
- Luke Humphries
- Luke Littler
- Michael van Gerwen
- Rob Cross
- Stephen Bunting
- Jonny Clayton
- Dave Chisnall
- Damon Heta
- Gerwyn Price
- Nathan Aspinall
- Chris Dobey
- Danny Nopert
- Peter Wright
- James Wade
- Gary Anderson
- Dimirti Van den Bergh
Pro Tour Order of Merit (16)
- Ryan Searle
- Josh Rock
- Martin Schindler
- Ross Smith
- Daryl Gurney
- Gian van Veen
- Raymond van Barneveld
- Cameron Menzies
- Mike De Decker
- Michael Smith
- Wessel Nijman
- Ritchie Edhouse
- Jermain Wattimena
- Dirk van Duijvenbode
- Ricardo Pietreckzo
- Luke Woodhouse
Tour Card (10)
- Cam Crabtree
- Thomas Lovely
- Ryan Joyce
- Thibault Tricole
- Matthew Dennant
- Darryl Pilgrim
- Jim Long
- Matt Campbell
- James Hurrell
- Owen Bates
Host Nations (4)
- Sybren Gijbels
- Cedric Waegemans
- Patrick De Backer
- Francois Schweyen
Nordic & Baltic (1)
East European (1)
Belgian Darts Open 2025 – Full schedule & results
The Belgian Darts Open runs from Friday, March 7 until Sunday, March 9.
The afternoon session starts at Midday and the evening session starts at 6pm.
The seeded players do not enter the competition until the second round on Saturday morning.
The first round to the quarter-finals are the best of 11 legs (first to 6), the semis are best of 13 (first to 7), and the final is best of 15 (first to 8).
Friday, March 7
Afternoon Session – Round 1
- Luke Woodhouse 6-4 Cedric Waegemans
- Cameron Menzies 5-6 Matt Campbell
- Gian van Veen 6-4 James Hurrell
- Ritchie Edhouse 6-4 Owen Bates
- Ricardo Pietreczko 6-5 Matthew Dennant
- Wissel Nijman 6-5 Francois Schweyen
- Daryl Gurney 6-1 Thibault Tricole
- Dirk van Duijvenbode 6-4 Darius Labanauskas
Evening Session – Round 1
- Ross Smith 6-5 Sybren Gijbels
- Ryan Searle 6-2 Darryl Pilgrim
- Jermaine Wattimena 6-2 Patrick De Backer
- Josh Rock 3-6 Boris Krcmar
- Michael Smith 6-5 Ryan Joyce – 8pm
- Raymond van Barneveld 6-4 Cam Crabtree
- Mike De Decker 6-5 Thomas Lovely
- Martin Schnidler 6-3 Jim Long
Saturday, March 8
Afternoon Session – Round 2
- Danny Nopert 2-6 Daryl Gurney
- Gary Anderson 2-6 Luke Woodhouse
- Dave Chisnall 6-3 Ricardo Pietreczko
- Jonny Clayton 6-5 Wessel Nijman
- Rob Cross 2-6 Ross Smith
- Damon Heta 6-0 Michael Smith
- Stephen Bunting 6-3 Jermaine Wattimena
- Nathan Aspinall 5-6 Ritchie Edhouse
Evening Session – Round 2
- James Wade 6-4 Raymond van Barneveld
- Peter Wright 2-6 Matt Campbell
- Gerwyn Price 6-2 Gian van Veen
- Dimitri van den Bergh 3-6 Martin Schindler
- Luke Humphries 4-6 Mike De Decker
- Luke Littler 6-3 Ryan Searle
- Michael van Gerwen 4-6 Boris Krcmar
- Chris Dobey 5-6 Dirk van Duijvenbode
Sunday, March 9
Afternoon session (from 12pm GMT) – Third Round
- Mike De Decker v Martin Schindler
- Damon Heta v Gerwyn Price
- Ross Smith v Matt Campbell
- Stephen Bunting v Daryl Gurney
- Luke Littler v Luke Woodhouse
- Dave Chisnall v Ritchie Edhouse
- Boris Krcmar v James Wade
- Jonny Clayton v Dirk van Duijvenbode
Evening session from 6pm
- Quarterfinal
- Semifinals
- Final