The man making darts for the Premier League winner

Matt Murray
BBC News
Reporting fromBridgend
PA Media Gerwyn Price, pictured throwing a dart at a dartboard out of shot. He is wearing a black shirt with blue and white shards across it and a white collar. Luke Littler has his back to the camera, looking straight ahead. The background is black. PA Media
Former world champion Gerwyn "The Iceman" Price beat teenage sensation Luke "The Nuke" Littler in March with darts made by Lee Huxtable

He is one of the most successful designers in the sports industry with a legion of world champions to his name.

But Lee Huxtable is not widely known outside the world of darts.

On Thursday night, Luke Humphries was crowned the 2025 champion of Premier League Darts, and he sealed victory at the O2 in London, with darts designed by the Welsh engineer.

From his Bridgend base, Mr Huxtable also made darts for semi finalist, Gerwyn Price and Dutch player Michael Van Gerwen for the tournament, which has run since February.

But of all the darts players he has worked with, he is missing one big one - current world champion, Luke Littler, whose arrows are made by rival company.

Head of development Lee Huxtable, is pictured next to cabinet which contains five rows of darts. He is pointing at one dart, and is wearing a black polo shirt. Lee is bald with short stubble.
Lee Huxtable has made darts for several world champions including Peter Wright, Gerwyn Price, Michael Van Gerwen and Luke Humphries

As head of development for Red Dragon Darts, Mr Huxtable tries to name all the world champions he has made darts for.

"Peter Wright, Gerwyn Price, Michael Van Gerwen, Luke Humphries, Trina Gulliver..." the names keep coming.

Within his work, Mr Huxtable has played a pivotal role in helping many players excel including World number one, Humphries.

"The Luke Humphries dart is a long shaft, front-weighted short barrel which creates certain amount of drag and lands at a perfect angle for him in the board to help his scoring.

"Every darts player is different, Peter 'snakebite' Wright's world titles mean a lot to me, me and Peter would go through hundreds of concepts," he said.

"His darts cover everything from short fat ones to long thin ones.

"One diamond-coated dart took 18 months in production and we had chemists involved. But he went on to win a world title with it which was very fulfilling."

In 2020, Mr Huxtable designed darts for both the PDC and BDO world champions.

Wright and Wayne Warren both credited Mr Huxtable for his help to make them the best in the world.

"Sometimes it might take years working with a player, other times you get a eureka moment and that can advance a player's game hugely," the engineer said.

"It could mean someone going from the top 32 and getting into top 16 and making the big time."

Winmau Lee Huxtable looks at a computer screen with former World Champion, Michael Van Gerwen, to design his dartsWinmau
Lee Huxtable designing Michael Van Gerwen's darts after the Dutch player signed with the company

Mr Huxtable is also making darts for another Welsh player, Jonny Clayton, from Carmarthenshire, who has won four titles with his darts.

"Jonny Clayton's game changed overnight and it skyrocketed to the next level," he said.

"He's a great character."

Mr Huxtable has also been finessing the darts of former world champion Price, from Caerphilly county, before he battled it out at the O2 on Thursday.

"I've never seen focus like that from Gerwyn Price," he said.

"He was a former rugby player who just played socially and he made it into the top 32.

"He said that's not good enough and when he made it into top 16 he still wasn't happy with that.

"He was so focused to be the best and to take Gerwyn from being a rugby player to a world champion was a big moment for us."

Nodor Lee standing alongside Gerwyn Price with the PDC World Championship trophy  in the middle of them. The silver trophy comes up to shoulder height of the men, with a globe on top of it.Nodor
Lee Huxtable designed Gerwyn Price's darts when he became the first Welshman to lift the PDC world title in 2021

Mr Huxtable, from Pontypridd, Rhondda Cynon Taf, has completed the majority of his work from Nodor's Bridgend headquarters for about 25 years, but also travels to Kenya where their darts are mass-produced for the retail market.

The family-run Nodor group, which Red Dragon Darts is part of, moved production of its darts and dartboards to Kenya after it acquired the Winmau brand about 20 years ago.

The sisal plant grows naturally in the east African country and is the best material for bristle boards, lowering operating costs.

Nodor opened up its own sales and distribution centre in Dallas, Texas in 2023 and now produces 30,000 sets of darts and 20,000 dartboards a week from its factories in Kenya, and employs 1,000 staff.

Mr Huxtable said: "It's always about the technology which goes into the dart for performance enhancement which is the most important for me.

"In one of my favourite darts we managed to fuse 85% tungsten at the back of the barrel with 95% tungsten at the front to move the centre of gravity forward.

"The concept being that a lot of players like a front-weighted dart but the players don't want to make the dart any fatter at the front."

Reuters Luke Littler kisses his world champion trophy in January. He has short dark hair and stubble, a dart board can be seen behind him.Reuters
Luke Littler was crowned world champion in January at the age of 17

With the Luke Littler effect fuelling the junior game, darts is now described as being in its third golden age and attracts the second highest viewing figures on Sky, behind Premier League football.

More than three million people watched 17-year-old Luke Littler win the world championship at Alexandra Palace in January.

Mr Huxtable said: "The youngsters have catapulted the game, we are seeing 12 and 13-year-olds throwing another level of darts for that age.

"By the time they're in their early 20s the standard is going to be even higher and with the viewing figures and the prize money going up, it'll become even more popular with youngsters."