Teenage darts star Luke Littler in surprise money-spinning business move

World champion Luke Littler has set up a new project away from the sport, which is expected to see him rake in a very heft bank balance, the Mirror can reveal

Luke Littler launches unexpected new venture which could earn him millions

Darts sensation Luke Littler is aiming to hit the bullseye with his new side hustle – as he ventures into property development. We can reveal the 18-year-old world champ has set up a new firm.

It’s called D16 Property Group Ltd. Luke – whose nickname is The Nuke – has taken inspiration for the company’s name from his World Darts Championship win in January. That’s when he defeated Michael Van Gerwen with a winning throw from a double 16 to become the youngest ever PDC World Champion, aged just 17. According to filings, Luke is the sole shareholder in the investment firm.

READ MORE: Luke Humphries going to hospital after fan injured him at US Darts Masters

Luke Littler playing darts
Talented Luke has set up a new business property as he looks other business opportunities(Image: AFP via Getty Images)

His agent Martin Foulds is named as director. It states the nature of business as “buying and selling of own real estate” – plus letting and management.

Luke moved into a fancy £6,000-a-month rental mansion in Warrington’s “Millionaire’s Row” last October. Taking his parents with him, they previously lived in a more modest £180,000 two-bed semi. The five-bedroom detached pad is in a leafy village on the outskirts of his hometown in Cheshire. It boasts a swimming pool, large garden, home cinema and six bathrooms.

Considered one of the most exciting young players darts has ever seen, Luke has enjoyed huge success since bursting on the scene at the World Darts Championship in 2023. Since then, he’s won more than £1. 5million in prize money and another £1. 5 million from other events – plus his lucrative sponsorship deals and telly appearance on top of that.

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The indoor pool at the £6,000-a-month house Luke is currently renting in Cheshire
The indoor pool at the £6,000-a-month house Luke is currently renting in Cheshire(Image: Right Move)

A source said: “A multi-millionaire at just 18, Luke’s earning potential knows no bounds. It comes as no surprise he wants to invest in property, like a lot of successful businessmen and sportspeople do. ”

Luke has just returned from the US, where he was competing in the US Darts Masters. The world number two was sent packing in the quarter-final.

The opportunities just keep rolling in for Luke, who is topping the bill at the first pro and celebrity darts match of its kind in London’s Hyde Park. Luke will play alongside Luke Humphries, Michael van Gerwen and Fallon Sherrock – along with singer Olly Murs, radio Roman Kemp, footballer-turned-presenter Dion Dublin and actor Joe Swash on Tuesday.

Luke Littler with his family celebrate one of his many victories
Luke Littler is close to his family and tare often in the crowds at his competitions (Image: PA)

Luke was awarded an MBE in the King’s Birthday Honours List last month for his services to darts. One person who wasn’t impressed was darts legend Dennis Priestley, who said he and fellow player Luke Humpries hadn’t “done enough to earn their MBEs just yet.” “Littler has been recognised for raising the popularity of darts which is great, but he can still do so much more. If he is getting an MBE this soon then you’d have to think he is on the right path to a knighthood, nothing would surprise me now.”

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Littler responded in an Instagram post: “Don’t deserve the MBE but done more in 12 months than he ever did…that’s what I would say anyway.”

Del Monte seeks bankruptcy protection as consumers turn away

Del Monte Foods, the 139-year-old company best known for its canned fruits and vegetables, is filing for bankruptcy protection as consumers in the United States increasingly bypass its products for healthier or cheaper options.

Del Monte announced the bankruptcy filing late Tuesday.

Del Monte, which also owns the Contadina tomato brand, College Inn and Kitchen Basics broth brands and the Joyba bubble tea brand, has secured $912. 5m in debtor-in-possession financing that will allow it to operate normally as the sale progresses.

The Walnut Creek, California-based brand has assets and liabilities ranging from $1bn to $10bn, according to a filing in a New Jersey bankruptcy court.

“After a thorough evaluation of all available options, we determined a court-supervised sale process is the most effective way to accelerate our turnaround and create a stronger and enduring Del Monte Foods,” CEO Greg Longstreet said in a statement.

The company has seen sales growth of Joyba and broth in the 2024 fiscal year, but not enough to offset weaker sales of Del Monte’s signature canned products.

“Consumer preferences have shifted away from preservative-laden canned food in favour of healthier alternatives,” Sarah Foss, global head of legal and restructuring at Debtwire, a financial consultancy, told the news agency The Associated Press.

Grocery inflation also caused consumers to seek out cheaper store brands. Last month, the consumer price index report showed a 0. 3 percent increase in the price of food and 2. 2 percent compared with this time last year.

Another blow is expected from US President Donald Trump’s 50 percent tariff on imported steel. This went into effect in June and will also push up the price that Del Monte and others pay for cans.

Del Monte Foods, which is owned by Singapore’s Del Monte Pacific, was also hit with a lawsuit last year by a group of lenders that objected to the company’s debt restructuring plan. The case was settled in May with a loan that increased Del Monte’s interest expenses by $4m annually, according to a company statement.

Gill century holds up battling England against India

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Second Test, Edgbaston

India 310-5: Gill 114*, Jaiswal 87; Woakes 2-59

England: Yet to bat

England currently lead five-match series 1-0

England were held up by India captain Shubman Gill’s patient century as their bowlers fought admirably on day one of the second Test at Edgbaston.

After captain Ben Stokes opted to bowl first again, his bowlers battled against Gill’s calmness and another flat pitch to limit India to 310-5 at the close.

Chris Woakes bowled KL Rahul off the inside edge in a fine new-ball spell and Brydon Carse found extra bounce to have Karun Nair caught at slip for 31 shortly before lunch.

But opener Yashasvi Jaiswal complied an elegant 87 and after he was caught behind off Stokes, Rishabh Pant put on 66 with Gill as the new-ball zip faded in the Birmingham sunshine.

England hung in, however, and Pant’s patience broke after tea when he hit Shoaib Bashir to long-on for 25. Nitish Kumar Reddy was bowled shouldering arms to Woakes in the next over.

That left India at risk of collapse but Gill remained unflustered and reached three figures for the second match in a row in 199 deliveries. He put on 99 with Ravindra Jadeja to see out the final 90 minutes of play.

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Familiar feelings in Birmingham

Stokes continues to defy all cricketing convention.

There were clouds overhead when he chose to bowl but the surface looked slow and favourable for batting even before the sunshine arrived after only a couple of overs.

In his mind – and India’s – will be England’s record chase of 378 against the same opposition here in 2022.

India were 359-3 at the end of day one in the first Test last week and still lost, meaning there will be no panic in England’s camp even if the Jadeja-Gill partnership ensured the day was shaded by their opponents.

Their patience in the field in the afternoon was impressive while Woakes and Carse threatened throughout.

A short-ball ploy attempted before lunch was quickly shelved and instead Stokes hunted wickets through clever field placements.

India’s changes appear an attempt to consolidate their lower order, which could yet prove crucial as they look to go beyond the 465 they made last week.

England play the long game

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Woakes was excellent with the new ball, finding a hint of movement off the seam while being relentless with his lines outside off stump.

Rahul tentatively played on, and had two tight lbw decisions – first against Jaiswal on 12 and the second against Nair on five – gone England’s way the day could have had a different complexion. Both were given not out on the field and shown as umpire’s call when England reviewed.

The hosts bowled more bouncers in the morning than in any opening session of a Test in England but this only allowed runs to flow for Jaiswal, who cut and drove.

Afterwards England corrected, dried up the runs and Jaiswal chased a wide delivery to be caught behind.

Pant was drawn in in similar fashion. A swashbuckling century-maker in both innings in Leeds, he only hit one four and one six in his 42 balls.

Gill holds firm

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When Reddy, one of the three players brought into India’s XI alongside spin-bowling all-rounder Washington Sundar and Akash Deep, played an inexplicable leave, India were 211-5.

Gill, though, did not offer a chance all day. The closest England came was an lbw decision they attempted to overturn when Gill had 17 but there was a big inside edge.

The 25-year-old did not play like the flowing batter seen in white-ball cricket.

Despite some elegant drives and clips through mid-wicket, the 125 balls he took to reach 50 was the most of his career. This was also his slowest century.

‘Scoring 450 is India’s best chance of winning’ – what they said

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Former England captain Michael Vaughan: “Shubman Gill said he’d have bowled but I think this is the way India can beat England – if they score 450.

“India should’ve won the first Test match if they held their chances. India are doing what they need to do to win this game.

“England bowled well enough to get two or three more wickets but the rub of the green with the umpire’s calls has gone the way of India.

“This is a flat wicket and there’s not a lot there for the seamers or spinners and England should score a lot on here if it doesn’t crack. “

England bowler Chris Woakes, speaking to BBC Sport: “I think we’ve put in a really good shift. I feel it was a good day, we asked questions on a good batting surface. Had things gone our way this morning, I feel like the day could’ve been very different but that’s the game we play.

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India Captain Gill Hits Another Hundred Against England In 2nd Test

Shubman Gill led from the front once more with a second hundred in as many matches as India captain to keep England at bay at Edgbaston on Wednesday.

Gill’s 114 not out was the cornerstone of India’s 310-5 at stumps on the first day of the second Test, with Yashasvi Jaiswal contributing a typically entertaining 87.

India lost two wickets in quick succession to be 211-5 but all-rounder Ravindra Jadeja (41 not out) helped Gill avoid a further collapse in an unbroken stand of 99.

Gill, however, knows better than anyone that individual milestones are no guarantee of team success.

In the first Test at Headingley, India posted five individual hundreds, including Gill’s 147, and still lost — the first time this had happened in more than 60,000 games of first-class cricket.

Batting collapses of 7-41 and 6-31 cost India dear before England, making light of a seemingly stiff target of 371, won by five wickets to go 1-0 up in a five-match series.

England captain Ben Stokes, as he did in Leeds, again opted to field after winning the toss, with England having achieved their all-time record fourth innings victory chase of 378 at Edgbaston, against India, three years ago.

KL Rahul, fresh from a hundred at Headingley, rarely looked comfortable as he laboured for a 26-ball two that ended when he played on to Chris Woakes.

Both Woakes (2-59 in 21 overs) and new-ball partner Brydon Carse (1-49 in 16) kept things tight.

But the pressure England had exerted in a first hour where India were held to 37-1 off 13 overs was released by Josh Tongue, whose 13 wicketless overs cost 66 runs.

England, however, would have been in a stronger position had a couple of close lbw reviews not gone against them on umpire’s call, with batsmen spared by the fact the on-field officials had initially ruled in their favour.

“A couple of decisions go our way early doors and then all of a sudden they’re 30-3 and we’re looking at a completely different day ahead,” Woakes told Sky Sports.

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The all-rounder added:  “A couple of wickets early in that last session, which we felt like we could have kicked on and got into the tail, but they played well. ”

Left-hander Jaiswal completed a 59-ball fifty, where 40 of his runs came in fours, with consecutive boundaries off fast bowler Tongue, a hook followed by a rasping cut.

Jaiswal Denied Century

Jaiswal, 62 not out at lunch, look destined for another hundred after his 101 at Headingley until caught behind flat-footedly edging a cut off a loose Stokes delivery, with India then 161-3.

New batsman Rishabh Pant, who in Leeds became only the second wicketkeeper in Test history to score two hundreds in a match, was relatively restrained in taking 23 balls to score his first boundary — a six off Shoaib Bashir.

The off-spinner, however, had his revenge when Pant (25) holed out to long-on.

India’s 208-4 became 211-5 when the recalled Nitesh Kumar Reddy was bowled playing no shot to a Woakes delivery that nipped back off the seam.

But the 25-year-old Gill pulled the lively Stokes in front of square and drove Carse for commanding fours.

Gill though required several minutes of on-field treatment when on 86 for what appeared to be cramp – a delay that led to boos from a capacity crowd at a sun-drenched Edgbaston.

But the jeers turned to cheers when, in the over before England took the new ball, Gill swept part-time off-spinner Joe Root for consecutive fours to complete a watchful 199-ball hundred, including 11 boundaries.

India made three changes, notably resting Jasprit Bumrah after it was announced before the series the outstanding fast bowler would only feature in three of the five Tests in order to protect his fitness following a back injury.

The third Test at Lord’s starts just four days after the scheduled end of the game in Birmingham. Akash Deep was given the unenviable task of replacing Bumrah, the world’s number one-ranked Test bowler.

Both teams and the umpires wore black armbands on Wednesday in memory of former England batsman Wayne Larkins, who died aged 71 last weekend.

UK lawmakers vote to ban Palestine Action as ‘terrorist’ group

Lawmakers in the United Kingdom have voted to proscribe campaign group Palestine Action as a “terrorist” organisation, raising fears about freedom of expression in the country.

Parliament voted 385-26 in favour of the measure against the group on Wednesday, the move coming after its activists broke into a military base last month and sprayed red paint on two planes in protest at the UK’s support for Israel’s war on Gaza.

Critics decried the chilling effect of the ban, which puts Palestine Action on a par with armed groups like al-Qaeda and ISIL (ISIS) in the UK, making it a criminal offence to support or be part of the protest group.

“Let us be clear: to equate a spray can of paint with a suicide bomb isn’t just absurd, it is grotesque. It is a deliberate distortion of the law to chill dissent, criminalise solidarity, and suppress the truth,” said lawmaker Zarah Sultana, a member of the ruling Labour party.

Sacha Deshmukh, chief executive of Amnesty International UK, slammed the move as “unprecedented legal overreach”, pointing out that it gave the authorities “massive powers to arrest and detain people, suppress speech and reporting, conduct surveillance and take other measures”.

“Using them against a direct-action protest group is an egregious abuse of what they were created for,” he said.

Reporting from London, Al Jazeera’s Milena Veselinovic said that protesters gathering outside Westminster had showed “defiance”.

“[They are] saying that they would still find a way to show support and hopefully not get arrested. But even if they do get arrested, many of them have told us that it is not the worst thing in the world,” she said.

The proscription order will reach parliament’s upper chamber, the House of Lords, on Thursday. If approved there, the ban on Palestine Action would become effective in the following days.

The group, which has called its proscription unjustified and an “abuse of power,” has challenged the decision in court and an urgent hearing is expected on Friday.

Lawmakers ‘boxed in’ by vote

Launched in July 2020, Palestine Action says it uses “disruptive tactics” to target “corporate enablers” and companies involved in weapons manufacture for Israel, such as Israel-based Elbit Systems and French multinational Thales.

The British government has accused the group of causing millions of pounds of damage through its actions.

On Tuesday, the group said its activists had blocked the entrance to an Elbit site in Bristol, southwestern England. Other members reportedly occupied the rooftop of a subcontracting firm in Suffolk, eastern England, that the group had linked to Elbit.

United Nations experts appointed by the UN Human Rights Council had previously urged the UK government to reconsider its threat to proscribe the group, arguing that acts of property damage without the intention to endanger life should not be considered “terrorism”.

Home Secretary Yvette Cooper, the UK’s interior minister, says that violence and criminal damage have no place in legitimate protest, and that a zero-tolerance approach was necessary for national security.

In addition to Palestine Action, the proscription order approved by parliament includes neo-Nazi group Maniacs Murder Cult and the Russian Imperial Movement, a white supremacist group which seeks to create a new Russian imperial state.

Al Jazeera’s Veselinovic said lawmakers had felt “boxed in” by the vote, feeling that they had no choice but to proscribe all three organisations.

Talking points as Lions Test team begins to take shape

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Fans gathered from mid-afternoon in the pubs of Caxton Street close to the Suncorp Stadium, familiar accents at every turn, reminders of home.

Long after the Lions had put away the Queensland Reds 52-12 – notching up eight tries and a half century of points for the second game in succession – these same fans were back where they started, with an eyeful of rugby and a skinful of pints. Lions jerseys everywhere. The first real stirrings of a proper red army in the land of the green and the gold.

Two games played in Australia and three played in total and we’re beginning to see a picture forming; not complete, but with more detail than before, some players coming up in rich colour and others beginning to fade to grey as the Lions build towards the first Test at the same stadium on 19 July.

Elliot Daly runs with the ballGetty Images

The curious situation at full-back

A statistic did the rounds during the week, inspired by rugby statinator @topofthemoonGW, that fairly knocked everyone to the ground. Elliot Daly had featured in 10 Lions matchday squads in a row before his run ‘ended’ in Brisbane against the Reds.

Only it hadn’t. Hugo Keenan dropped out through illness and Daly stepped back in to make it 11 in a row. It’s a number that would have had the old boys saluting him, the Lions of the late 1800s and early 1900s who ran themselves into the ground in so many games that half of them lost about two inches off their trouser leg.

We’re now back to where we were this time last week, sweating on an injured Lion. Tomos Williams had to go home, cut down in peak form, and the hope is that Daly, playing fantastically, doesn’t suffer the same fate after going off in the second half. As sporting heartbreak goes, it would be beyond cruel.

What a strange situation at full-back now. Not a crisis by any means, but curious. Daly is nursing an injury to his arm, Keenan hasn’t played since the end of May and Blair Kinghorn only just landed in the country the other day.

Head coach Andy Farrell was asked if he was worried. “No, we’ve lots of full-backs,” he said.

And he’s right. Kinghorn and Keenan will get up to speed soon enough and, in reserve, he has Marcus Smith (admittedly not everyone’s cup of tea at 15, but an option) and the versatility of Huw Jones who revived his international career when playing well at full-back for half a season with Harlequins before returning to Glasgow.

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Itoje’s timely reminder of his excellence

Lions captain Maro Itoje was asked on Monday about the high number of minutes he has played this season for club and country and whether he felt tired at all.

On the contrary, he said. He felt revived and energised by the Lions around him – and in Brisbane he proved it. One try, 10 carries, 18 tackles – he was an absolute pest just as soon as the Lions settled down after their initial ropey period.

He wasn’t so hot against the Pumas but this was Maro beginning to crank through the gears.

“I think the whole point of these tours is you’re with great players, and you see great players performing well, and it gives you extra motivation to perform well,” he said, later.

Can Freeman break up the Irish wing duopoly?

When Farrell singled out Mack Hansen for praise after the Western Force game last weekend, Freeman might have gulped hard. The coach of Ireland bigging up an Ireland wing?

It can’t have been easy listening for Tommy Freeman or for Duhan van der Merwe as they attempt to break up the Irish pair for the Test team.

Van der Merwe, a sensational broken field runner, has lost too much ground on the other three at this point. He was good and bad on Wednesday, but he’s clearly fourth of the four wings. His game just didn’t fit with what Farrell wants from his wings.

Farrell seeking clarity on some scrum calls

In their two games in Australia the Lions have encountered some bumps on the road – desperation and a high penalty count in the first half in Perth, some restart issues, a few unconvincing scrums – but they’re clever players and capable of coming up with solutions on the hoof.

The scrum was penalised too often for comfort in Brisbane. It didn’t cost them, but the Lions don’t want to get a reputation for being ill-disciplined.

“I think we’ll look back on some of the decisions and get some clarity on a few,” said Farrell. “I suppose that’s how it always is, isn’t it? It’s hard to referee at the best of times. But I obviously know that we’ve got a world-class front row. “

When you hear a coach saying that he will seek “clarity” on scrum interpretation it normally means he didn’t agree with the interpretation. There was a strange kind of spikiness around this one.

“I’m saying we need some clarity on bits, because that’s what you’d always want to do, so you can fix things if you need to fix them,” he said.

Jac Morgan scored the Lions' fifth tryGetty Images

Lions Test squad begins to crystallise

Jac Morgan needed a big game – and he delivered. His energy levels were tremendous, his aggression in the tackle, his subtle touches and, of course, his try were of the highest quality.

Morgan rose up the ranks while Tom Curry fell down. He has lost his mojo at the wrong time. Close to a Test certainty during the season, Curry will now be lucky if he makes the 23. It’s all beginning to look very cut-throat.

Will Stuart had a chance to propel himself into the box-seat at tighthead but he got done in defence and gave away three penalties. It wasn’t the audition he wanted.

Against all odds, Finlay Bealham, not even in the original squad, might just be favourite for a Test spot because the great Tadhg Furlong still hasn’t stirred in the way Furlong can.

Offering up sweet thoughts for Daly’s fitness, there’s a Test 23 beginning to emerge through the fog of uncertainty. Skin and hair will fly in protest, but…

Kinghorn (Daly), Hansen, Ringrose, Tuipulotu, Lowe, Russell (F Smith), Gibson-Park (Mitchell); Genge (Schoeman), Sheehan (Cowan-Dickie), Bealham (Furlong), Itoje, McCarthy, Chessum (Beirne), Van der Flier, Conan (Pollock)

Such is the nature of this trek what happened in Brisbane will be an after-thought later on Thursday when Farrell names the team to face the Waratahs. So much build-up and yet the Lions have to move on from it in a relative instant.

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