The PDC heads back to Australia this weekend for the Australian Darts Masters in Wollongong.
Four of the top five are heading to the event Down Under which will pit 16 players against one other with £60,000 in prize money on the line.
This is the sixth World Series title of 2024 and these five players have a chance of taking it home.

Rob Cross
Voltage heads down under in a rich vein of form in World Series events this year, having won the US Darts Masters in June.
The 33-year-old also finished runner-up in Copenhagen and Poland, losing to Gerwyn Price and Luke Littler respectively.
Rob Cross won last year’s event in Wollongong and he has to be made one of the favourites heading into this event.
Cross gets his campaign underway against Haupai Puha.
Luke Humphries
Bizarrely, the World No. 1 is yet to win a World Series event in his career, with semi-finals proving his downfall in the US Darts Masters and the Nordic Darts Masters this term.
Luke Humphries has won six televised titles this year, however, and he has a massive chance to turn his World Series luck around this weekend.
Humphries will play Joe Comito in his opening game.
Luke Littler

Littler will be looking to build on a very impressive debut year in Australia, after picking up the Premier League title in May.
The teenage sensation has also won two World Series events this year in Bahrain and Poland so the format clearly suits him.
Littler will play Rob Modra in his opening clash.
Damon Heta
The Australian No. 1 has form at Wollongong, having made the final at his home tournament in 2023. The Heat lost out to Cross last year, but will hope he can go one further in front of a rowdy home crowd.
The Australian has been impressive in 2024, reaching the semi-final of the UK Open for the first time in his career and he could be a dark horse for this weekend’s tournament.
Heta takes on John Hurring in the opening session of play.
Dimitri Van den Bergh

The reigning UK Open Champion has had an up-and-down year. While Van den Bergh got to the semi-final of this year’s Masters, he also went crashing out of the World Championship in the second road.
The Belgian is a momentum player and if The Dreammaker can get off to a good start in Australia he could go deep into the tournament.
He plays Jeremy Fagg in his opening clash at Wollongong.
