Gerwyn Price has won his last six matches against Luke Littler and does not want that record to stop any time soon, especially in the Premier League.
Priceâs most recent win against the reigning world champion came on Night Six of the Premier League in Nottingham when the âIcemanâ stunned Littler 6-3 in the final to win his second title of the season and move up to third place in the table with 12 points.
It extends Littlerâs wait for a win against Price and stands the Welshman in good stead as the table gets ever tighter.
While Price insists that he approaches playing Littler no differently to how he plays other opponents, he does believe Littler is in a lot of playersâ heads and he could also now be affecting the 18-year-old.
âIt doesnât make a difference to me,â Price said. âIt will make a difference to him.
âI play Luke like I play every other player. Heâs just another number to me. I think thatâs where my strengths are.
âI donât worry about who Iâm playing, whether itâs Luke, either of the Lukes [Humphries], Michael [van Gerwen], anybody.
âI just go up and play my own game and donât worry about any other player, whereas other players, I think probably Luke is in their head a little bit. I might be in Lukeâs head a little bit.
âBut I just turn up and play. It doesnât matter who Iâm playing.â
While Price ended his Night Six win over Littler by declaring the world No 2 to be a player who is becoming unstoppable, he hopes his winning record against him will continue.
Indeed, he had to wait a long while himself to eventually secure a win over Van Gerwen and he hopes he can cause the same angst for Littler, who faces Nathan Aspinall in Thursdayâs quarter-final.
âI just think heâs brilliant but I donât think itâs anything that Iâm doing. I just think itâs the way heâs thinking at the minute,â he added.
âIt took me a while to get a win over Michael van Gerwen and then when I did, everything was fine. Hopefully he doesnât get that win for a while.â
Cardiff atmosphere is âon another levelâ
An added element for Price is that, when he walks out for Thursdayâs quarter-final against Rob Cross on Night Seven, he will have the extra pressure of the hometown Cardiff crowd behind him.
That means he will be more focused than ever on giving the spectators something to cheer about.
âI know thereâs a lot of pressure on me tomorrow, which I put on myself, not on anybody else. Because I want to go out and perform for the Welsh crowd and give them something that they can cheer for,â Price said.
âItâs just pressure that I put on myself. I donât want to go there and lose the first round and not give something back to the crowd.
âTheyâre going to enjoy the night no matter what but if Iâm still in, still playing really well, get to the final and even win it, Iâm sure the crowd will be right behind me and enjoying it a little bit more.
âI just put pressure on myself, thatâs all. Nothing from anywhere else.
âCardiff is another level. When I go there, theyâre right behind me. When theyâre singing, the atmosphere is brilliant.
âIt is one of the smaller venues in the Premier League, which sets the atmosphere aside again.
âIâm looking forward to it. I only get it once a year so fingers crossed it will be the same tomorrow.â
Where does the Premier League head next?
The Premier League continues on Thursday March 20 from the Utilita Arena in Cardiff as Luke Humphries faces Michael van Gerwen. Watch Night Seven of Premier League Darts in Cardiff, live on Sky Sports Main Event and Sky Sports Action from 7pm â stream with NOW.
Sky Sports will once again be the home of the Premier League in 2025, with every night exclusively live along with the World Matchplay, World Grand Prix, Grand Slam of Darts and more! Stream darts and more top sport with NOW
<