Ricky Evans set for walk-on song switch after Ally Pally run goes past Christmas
Ricky Evans celebrates defeating seventh seed James Wade at the PDC World Championship. Picture: John Walton/PA
Ricky Evans gave himself a post-Christmas walk-on song dilemma by dumping seventh seed James Wade out of the PDC World Championship.
Evans missed seven match darts before winning the final set 6-4 in legs for an epic 3-2 second-round victory at Alexandra Palace.
Four-time World Championship semi-finalist Wade became the highest seed to depart this yearâs tournament after missing his own match dart at double five when 4-3 ahead in the final set.
EVANS KNOCKS OUT WADE â
— PDC Darts (@OfficialPDC) December 22, 2025
It is an absolute THRILLER at Alexandra Palace as Ricky Evans beats James Wade in a tie-break!
Drama to the last dart!
đș https://t.co/59TualjgND#WCDarts | R2 pic.twitter.com/MIx7QfEmhk
The colourful Evans is known for his festive shirts and walking out to âMerry Christmas Everyoneâ by Shakinâ Stevens, and he took to the stage this time holding a Santa-dressed dancing toy.
After a breathless five-setter, the fast-throwing 35-year-old from Kettering said: âThe problem is now Iâm (playing) after Christmas.
âIâm going to have to walk on to something not Christmas, arenât I?
âIâm going to have âLike A PrayerââŠMadonna. Who cares? Iâm still going.â
Evans won the opening set against the darts, helped by a 128 checkout and Wade missing double five.
Wade produced a 170 âBig Fishâ finish on the way to levelling matters, but Evans took the next set, with a 13-dart leg against the throw proving decisive.
Evans lost his composure in the fourth set, but 144 and 89 checkouts at the start of the fifth took him to the brink of victory.
At 2-1 ahead, Evans missed six match darts, including three at double one, and was pulled up for an underarm throw in the next leg by the referee.
Evans then missed a seventh match dart at double 16 when 3-2 ahead and, after Wade had failed to get over the line himself, he finally kept his nerve with superb 99 finish.
âImagine coming to darts and winning 3-0? Evans said. âWhatâs the point? Make it interesting.
âI say it every year, âIâm weird but Iâm box officeâ. Come on.â
Kenyan hero David Munyuaâs historic run was ended by a 3-0 defeat to Kevin Doets.
Munyuaâs first-round victory over world number 18 Mike de Decker had delighted African darts fans and earned a congratulatory message from Kenyaâs president William Ruto.
The 30-year-old works as a full-time vet in Nairobi and had never left Africa before travelling to London for the World Championship.
The crowd, who included members of Kenyaâs High Commission in the UK, were fully on the underdogâs side and Munyua thrilled them by throwing five 180s.
đŁïž "There's nothing that can unite Africa better than sport"
— PDC Darts (@OfficialPDC) December 22, 2025
David Munyua bows out from a memorable Alexandra Palace campaign with heartwarming words on what his performance can do for darts in Kenya đ°đȘ#WCDarts pic.twitter.com/Mu8i4NEVpd
Doetsâ power scoring and consistency ensured there would be no upset this time and he said on stage: âI was expecting a lot of booing (for me). They are still booing me now.
âBut itâs fair enough, he is the peopleâs champion. For someone from Kenya to reach the second round is amazing.â
Former World Championship semi-finalist Gabriel Clemens shrugged off disappointing form in 2025 to upset Wessel Nijman, the number 31 seed, 3-0.
Clemens will now meet either number two seed Luke Humphries or 71-year-old Paul Lim in round three.
Latvian number one Madars Razma beat Scotlandâs Darren Beveridge 3-1.





