Humphries rises to third in the world after defying nine-dart van Gerwen to land another major title
Newbury’s Luke Humphries defied a nine-darter from Michael van Gerwen to storm to Cazoo Players Championship Finals glory in Minehead on Sunday night with an astonishing 11-9 triumph in the final.
Reigning champion van Gerwen had looked set to claim his eighth Players Championship Finals crown when he achieved his third nine-darter in the event's history and opened up a 9-5 lead at Butlin's Minehead Resort.
However Humphries, who grew up in Newbury, reeled off an incredible six successive legs to secure a third televised title inside two months and scoop the £120,000 top prize.
Humphries' success follows his wins in the World Grand Prix and Grand Slam of Darts during a hectic autumn, and sees the 28-year-old move up to a career-high third on the PDC Order of Merit.
"To stand here with my third major title, I can't put it into words," Humphries said. "I never dreamed of winning one, let alone three.
"I'd love to have beaten Phil Taylor in a final but I never got that opportunity so the next best thing for me is [to beat] the great of our generation, Michael van Gerwen.
"To beat him in a final is what I always dreamed of. I watched this man seven or eight years ago being at the absolute peak of his career, winning everything [and hitting] 110 averages for fun.
"To beat him in a final, I think this one probably does mean the most to me.
"It means I'm the best player in the world - he said I had to beat him in a final and I did. Michael was fantastic there, but he allowed me in."
Humphries opened the final with a superb 130 bull finish, with Van Gerwen taking out 126 in response before claiming the final's first break of throw in leg five with his incredible nine-darter; landing back-to-back 180s before finishing 141 on double 12.
The pair then traded 14-darters and Van Gerwen landed a 13-darter to lead 5-3, with Humphries replying on double ten before missing double 18 to level in leg ten, as the reigning champion pinned tops for a 74 combination.
Van Gerwen then secured a second break of throw by finishing 90 in two darts to punish a missed bull from Humphries for a 164 checkout, before a 13-darter gave the world number two daylight at 8-4.
Humphries responded with back-to-back maximums in a 12-darter to claim his fifth leg, only for Van Gerwen to fire in a ten-dart leg to restore his cushion.
Another 14-darter saw Humphries hit back before he broke for the first time on double ten, and double five saw the gap reduced to one leg at 9-8.
Humphries then followed a 180 with a stunning 142 checkout to level the final, and continued his momentum with a third-dart double ten to move 10-9 up.
The tension rose as Van Gerwen battled to force a deciding leg, but the Dutchman missed eight darts at doubles to keep his hopes alive before Humphries finally pinned double one to close out a memorable triumph.
Humphries had defeated James Wade in Sunday afternoon's quarter-finals and averaged over 106 in his semi-final romp against Ryan Joyce, but admitted that he had to dig deep in the title decider.
"When I was playing that game, I felt flat," he admitted. "Against Ryan I was so tired and in that game there I felt I had nothing to give but I kept grinding."
Van Gerwen, who was appearing in his ninth final in 11 years of the event, paid tribute to Humphries after their dramatic contest.
"I had my chances," he said. "I was 9-5 up and from that position, I'm not allowed to lose; simple as that.
"I made it incredibly difficult and when you do that against a player in his form, you only can blame yourself.
"I had opportunities there but he played well at the end, he never gave up and fair play to him."
Humphries and van Gerwen will now turn their attention to the World Championship, darts’ showpiece event held at the world-famous Alexandra Palace. Humphries, who is joint-favourite for the prestigious tournament, will begin his run in the second round, where he’ll meet either Lee Evans or Sandro Eric Sosing. The action begins on December 15.