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Luke Littler demolishes Krzysztof Ratajski in quarter-finals to win over Ally Pally crowd

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Luke Littler demolishes Krzysztof Ratajski in quarter-finals to win over Ally Pally crowd

Luke Littler got the Alexandra Palace crowd back on side as he sauntered into the World Championship semi-finals.

Littler was booed heavily during his fourth-round win over Rob Cross and antagonised the baying fans further when he crassly thanked them for paying for his substantial prize money.

The 18-year-old defending champion said he was “expecting the worst” for his quarter-final tie with Krzysztof Ratajski but had them in the palm of his hand after a virtuoso display.

There was a “Big Fish” 170-checkout amid four ton-plus finishes, 10 180s and a 100.05 average as he claimed a masterful 5-0 victory in little over 30 minutes.

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Although there were some boos as he walked towards the stage, the overwhelming response was positive and a rendition of ‘There’s only one Luke Littler’ before the match started will have put his mind at ease.

And the teenager deserves the adulation as he looks on an unstoppable course to becoming the first man to retain the World Championship since Gary Anderson 10 years ago.

Few can live with him and the scary thought for the rest of the field is that Littler has more gears to find ahead of his last-four date with Ryan Searle.

Luke Littler had the crowd eating out of his palm after a clean sweep (Steven Paston/PA)

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Luke Littler had the crowd eating out of his palm after a clean sweep (Steven Paston/PA)

“The crowd were very good tonight. It’s the new year so there must be some new fans. They were great, I was good and we move on tomorrow,” he said on Sky Sports.

“A win is a win. Maybe because I had two days off, I didn’t feel comfortable. Hopefully now I am playing day after day, I play better tomorrow.

“When I was 2-0 up, I didn’t feel good. I’ve not played for two nights. I’ll be back tomorrow.”

Anderson returned to the semi-finals for the first time in four years after ending Justin Hood’s dream debut run. The 55-year-old is enjoying a renaissance and is now just two wins away from lifting a third world title, 10 years after his last.

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If he can do so, he would become the oldest player to lift the PDC world title and join Michael van Gerwen in second place in the all-time list of champions.

(Action Images via Reuters)

After beating Van Gerwen on Tuesday night, Anderson looked every bit a potential champion as he dispatched Hood 5-2.

The Scot will now meet Gian van Veen in Friday’s semi-final, which will be his eighth last-four encounter at Ally Pally. For his part Van Veen put in a spectacular performance to sweep Luke Humphries aside 5-1 and prove his own credentials for the world title.

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The Dutchman is now ranked No.3 in the world following his win and is aiming to add the World Championship title to his European crown.

Meanwhile, Littler’s next opponent Searle had not dropped a set in reaching the last eight and again showed his class in a 5-2 victory over number five seed Jonny Clayton.

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