How to watch the 2021 Unibet Premier League

BetMGM Premier League

Here are the ways to watch the 2021 Unibet Premier League around the world.

Pundits predict Unibet Premier League table after nine nights

BetMGM Premier League

We asked seven pundits to predict how the Unibet Premier League table will look after nine nights.

Revised 2021 Unibet Premier League fixtures

BetMGM Premier League

Updated fixtures following James Wade's replacement of Gerwyn Price.

Price replaced by Wade for 2021 Unibet Premier League

BetMGM Premier League

Gerwyn Price has been ruled out of the Unibet Premier League and will be replaced in the field by James Wade.

2021 Unibet Premier League preview

BetMGM Premier League

The Unibet Premier League gets underway in Milton Keynes on Monday.

2021 Unibet Premier League Predictor Game launched

BetMGM Premier League

Win fantastic prizes by taking part in the Unibet Premier League Predictor Game!

Unibet Premier League Quiz: Win a signed PL dartboard!

BetMGM Premier League

Take on our quiz to be in with a chance of winning a dartboard signed by this year's Unibet Premier League stars!

Enjoyment key for Price ahead of fourth Unibet Premier League tilt

BetMGM Premier League

Gerwyn Price insists he will not be weighed down by expectation in the Premier League.

Unibet Premier League players ranked on early season form

BetMGM Premier League

Jonny Clayton is the form player heading into the 2021 Unibet Premier League.

Durrant drawing inspiration from 2020 campaign ahead of title defence

BetMGM Premier League

Glen Durrant is drawing inspiration from his 2020 campaign as he prepares to begin his Unibet Premier League title defence.

Gerwyn Price secured his second nightly victory in this year’s BetMGM Premier League with a clinical 6-3 success against Luke Littler in Thursday’s Night Six final in Nottingham.

The Welshman extended his remarkable winning run against Littler to six games at the Motorpoint Arena, defying a 103 average and seven 180s from the teenage phenom to triumph.

Price stormed to victory on Night Three in Dublin, although back-to-back quarter-final defeats against Luke Humphries and Michael van Gerwen saw him relinquish his place in the top four.

However, the 40-year-old catapulted himself up to third in the table with victories over Stephen Bunting, Van Gerwen and Littler on a compelling night of action in the East Midlands.

Price condemned Bunting to a sixth straight quarter-final defeat in a high-quality opener, despite the St Helens ace averaging 102 and converting a spectacular 170 checkout in the penultimate leg.

The Markham ace then powered past Van Gerwen in the last four, averaging 107 and landing four maximums to set up a fascinating showdown against reigning champion Littler.

Price punished four missed darts in the opening leg from Littler to seize the early initiative, before firing in back-to-back 14-darters to race into a 3-0 lead.

Littler opened his account with a 12-darter in leg four, but after restoring his buffer with a brilliant 123 combination on the bull, Price then produced another ton-plus checkout to clinch the £10,000 bonus.

“Luke is the best player in the world at the minute, and he’s going to be for many years," reflected Price, who is now four points clear in the race for Play-Off qualification.

“It’s the same when you play Michael van Gerwen and Gary Anderson. You know you need to be at your best to beat these players.

“I’m just glad to get another win tonight. I have tried to be more positive this year, and it is showing on the board.

“In the last few years I’ve been quite negative, but before the World Championship I did some work with a sports psychologist trying to put my frame of mind in the right place, and it’s worked.”

Littler’s run to a fourth nightly final saw him move top of the table at the expense of his great rival Humphries, who he overcame in the evening’s opening quarter-final.

The World Champion recovered from 4-3 down to defeat the world number one, turning the tide with a clutch 164 combination in leg eight.

The Warrington wonderkid then conjured up sensational 167, 127 and 164 finishes - all on the bullseye - on his way to defeating Rob Cross 6-3 in the semi-finals, averaging 107 in the process.

Cross had recorded a resounding 6-2 win over Chris Dobey earlier in the night, converting six of his seven attempts at double to triumph with a ton-plus average.

Van Gerwen, meanwhile, reeled off three straight legs to overturn a 4-3 deficit against Nathan Aspinall in the evening’s other quarter-final, as the Dutchman cemented his place in the top four.