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Lucky Rebel Sportsbook Darts Hub  |  18+  |  luckyrebel.la

Darts  Â·  Tier 1 Hub  Â·  Crypto & USD Accepted

Darts Betting Odds & Lines

PDC World Championship  Â·  Premier League  Â·  World Matchplay  Â·  PDC Pro Tour  Â·  Game on.

Tournaments coveredPDC World Championship, Premier League, World Matchplay, Players Championship, Pro Tour, World Series, MODUS Super Series
PDC World Championship96 players  Â·  Alexandra Palace  Â·  mid-December to early January  Â·  best-of-13 sets final
Premier League Darts8 players  Â·  February to May  Â·  weekly nightly tour  Â·  Triple Crown event
World Matchplay32 players  Â·  Winter Gardens, Blackpool  Â·  July  Â·  third leg of the Triple Crown
Players Championship Finals64 players  Â·  November  Â·  ranking-based qualifying field
PDC Pro TourPlayers Championship floor events & European Tour events  Â·  year-round
Other majorsWorld Grand Prix, UK Open, the Masters, World Cup of Darts, World Series stops
Market typesMatch winner, set/leg handicap, totals, correct score, 180 props, checkout markets, outrights
Markets per matchHundreds on PDC World Championship matches  Â·  dozens on Pro Tour floor events
Live in-playThrow-by-throw across every major televised event
Crypto acceptedBTC, ETH, USDT, LTC, BCH, BSV
Minimum bet$10 USD or crypto equivalent
Cap on winningsNone

Game on.

Phil Taylor's televised nine-darter. Premier League, March 2010 — perfect, in front of Sky Sports. Michael Smith's nine-darter in the World Championship final. Alexandra Palace, January 2023 — same leg as a Van Gerwen miss on the bull, the greatest leg of darts ever played. Luke Littler at sixteen. Ally Pally, December 2023 to January 2024 — runner-up at the World Championship as a teenager. Darts' biggest moments are decided by a single double, a single miss, a single read of the board. So are the bets that beat them.

Lucky Rebel covers the full oche. The PDC World Championship at Alexandra Palace every December and January with the longest formats and the deepest prop books in the sport. Premier League Darts across the February-to-May weekly tour — eight players, sixteen weeks of nightly fixtures, the second jewel of the Triple Crown. The World Matchplay at the Winter Gardens in Blackpool every July as the third Triple Crown leg. The Players Championship Finals in November with 64 of the world's best stepping to the oche. The full PDC Pro Tour year-round, the European Tour, the World Series, the MODUS Super Series, plus the World Grand Prix, the UK Open and the World Cup of Darts. Match winner, set and leg handicaps, totals, correct score, most 180s, highest checkout, nine-darter props and the full tournament outright book on every event.

If they're stepping to the oche somewhere, there's a market on it. Game on.


The Circuit

The PDC World Championship — Ally Pally in December and January

The biggest event in the sport. Ninety-six players, Alexandra Palace, three weeks across the festive period from mid-December to early January. The format builds in length through the rounds — best-of-5 sets in the first round, best-of-7 in the second, best-of-9 in the third, best-of-11 in the fourth, best-of-13 in the quarter-finals and semi-finals, and a best-of-13 set final on the first Wednesday of January. Each set is a first-to-three legs format, which means the longer-round matches can play 50+ legs. The longer the format, the more the underlying scoring and finishing percentages compound. Lucky Rebel runs the full World Championship prop book — outright winner, top-half winner, bottom-half winner, quarter-of-the-draw winners, every match on the moneyline, set and leg handicaps, totals, most 180s, highest checkout, nine-darter Yes/No, and the full per-set and per-leg prop board.

Premier League Darts & The Triple Crown

The Triple Crown is the World Championship, the Premier League and the World Matchplay. Premier League Darts is the second jewel — eight players, sixteen weeks of weekly nightly fixtures from February to May, played in arenas across the UK, Ireland and Europe. Each night runs a knockout bracket: quarter-final, semi-final, final, with weekly points feeding into the season-long table. The top four after sixteen weeks contest the play-off finals at The O2 in London in late May. The format rewards consistency more than peak power — a player who throws steady 95-100 averages across sixteen weekly nights typically out-performs a player who peaks at 110 for a single night then drops to 88 the next. Lucky Rebel runs full markets on every Premier League night plus the season-long outright on the eventual play-off champion.

Players Championship Finals & The PDC Pro Tour

The PDC Pro Tour is the season-long Players Championship floor circuit — roughly 30 events per year of best-of-11 leg matches played on darting floors in the UK, Germany, the Netherlands and beyond, with ranking points feeding the PDC Order of Merit. The Players Championship Finals every November gathers the top 64 players from the season-long Players Championship rankings into a single televised four-day event. The European Tour runs in parallel through the summer months with weekend events across Germany, Austria, Hungary and the Czech Republic. Lucky Rebel runs full markets on every floor event in the Players Championship and European Tour streams, plus the full Players Championship Finals prop book in November.

The World Series, MODUS Super Series & Major Invitationals

The World Series of Darts takes the PDC format on tour through the calendar — events in New York, Las Vegas, Dubai, Australia, Poland, and the Bahrain Darts Masters in January. The MODUS Super Series runs a year-round televised tour of mid-tier ranking events. The World Grand Prix in October is the only PDC event played in a double-start, double-finish format — players need to begin each leg with a double, not just finish on one — which produces a materially different scoring profile from the standard PDC events. The UK Open in March is the open-draw event where qualifiers from regional darts venues mix with the Pro Tour field. The Masters at the start of the year features the top 24 in the Order of Merit; the World Cup of Darts in September is the only major doubles event on the calendar.


01Match Winner, Spread & Totals

The three core darts game lines. Match Winner (moneyline — a straight outright on who wins the match). Spread (set or leg handicap, depending on the format — best-of-7 leg matches sit at -1.5, best-of-11 at -2.5, World Championship set formats at -1.5 or -2.5 sets). Total (Over/Under on total legs played in the match, the standard best-of-11 line sitting at 9.5 legs, the best-of-19 line at 14.5).

The brief lays it out: a player with a strong three-dart average but a mediocre checkout percentage often looks good on the raw stats but is vulnerable on -2.5 or -3.5 leg handicaps, because wasted visits on doubles let the opponent hold and keep matches closer than the scoring suggests. Taking the superior finisher at +legs is the structural lean. Alternative spread markets stretch wider in both directions with corresponding price moves — pulling the favourite down to -1.5 for shorter odds, pushing out to -4.5 for longer. Totals move on the scoring-versus-finishing balance: two high-first-nine, low-checkout players produce structural Over reads on total legs because the legs run long.


02Set, Leg & Correct Score Markets

The deeper match-level markets. Correct Score on the full match (3-0, 3-1, 3-2 across best-of-5; 6-0 through 6-5 across best-of-11). Correct Score on the individual sets (3-0 legs, 3-1 legs, 3-2 legs). Set winner markets on long-format matches. Race-to-X legs Over/Under. First set winner. Half-match handicap (leading at the mid-point). To go all the way (the underdog to push the favourite to a deciding leg or deciding set).

Correct Score is where the format-and-finishing reads pay the most. A player who routinely closes matches 6-1 or 6-2 against par opposition but draws even with elite opposition is mispriced on the 6-3 and 6-4 correct-score markets when matched against a tier-two opponent. First-set winner is its own market in long-format World Championship matches; fast-starting players with above-average opening-leg checkout percentages are the structural lean against slow-starting opponents who only settle into rhythm after the first interval. Read the first-set log across the previous five matches. Read the deciding-leg record. The correct-score book rewards the homework that match-level moneyline pricing washes out.


03Match Props, 180s & Checkout Markets

The darts-specific prop book. Most 180s in the match. Total 180s Over/Under. Highest checkout in the match (typically set in the 110-130 band depending on the players). Nine-darter Yes/No (rare but real). Individual player 180 count Over/Under. Highest checkout by named player. Total ton-plus checkouts. Combo bets pairing markets — highest checkout x total 180s, or most 180s x match winner. Player to hit a 170 finish Yes/No (the maximum possible checkout, T20-T20-Bullseye).

First-nine average and 180s-per-leg are where the deepest darts pricing efficiency questions live. The brief lays it out directly: a player with a modest overall checkout percentage but a disproportionately high success rate on 120+ finishes is more valuable in highest-checkout Over markets and combo spread markets than in basic moneyline bets where the pricing is already efficient. Fast scorers with elite first-nine averages produce more legs that reach big trebles, which feeds the 180-based markets. A player running a 100+ first-nine but only 32% on doubles is the structural lean on Overs on total legs and most 180s, but the structural fade on the moneyline against a steady-finisher opponent.


04Tournament Outrights, Triple Crown & Tour Futures

The long money. PDC World Championship outright winner — the headline market in the sport, opening in September with top potters typically priced between +500 and +30000 across the field. Premier League Darts season-long winner. World Matchplay outright. Players Championship Finals outright. World Grand Prix outright (the double-start format event). UK Open outright. The Masters outright. World Cup of Darts (pairs format) outright. Triple Crown season outright — winning all three of the World Championship, Premier League and World Matchplay in a single calendar year. End-of-year PDC Order of Merit world number one.

World Championship outright value sits longest in September before the autumn Pro Tour and European Tour ranking events compress the field. The top seven seeds at Alexandra Palace are typically priced inside +800 by the time the draw is made in late November; the +2000 to +10000 band is where the structural value lives on first-time semifinalists and players hitting peak form in the autumn ranking events. Premier League outrights open in February with the eight-player field already locked in; the structural value sits on the second-tier players in the field with soft early-week fixtures. World Matchplay outrights open in June after the European Tour compresses the Blackpool draw field.


How to Bet on Darts — Key Concepts

Darts sharps read first-nine average, checkout percentage, 180s per leg and the deciding-leg record. Public money tracks the headline three-dart average and the last televised result. The gap between underlying scoring-and-finishing balance and headline result is where the structural value lives.

First-Nine Average & The Scoring Read

Public money tracks the overall three-dart average — the blended scoring-and-finishing number that goes on the broadcast scoreboard. Sharps separate the two phases: first-nine average isolates pure scoring across the first three visits of each leg, before the finishing phase kicks in. Elite professional players sit between 95 and 105 on first-nine; the very best push above 110 across a session. A player posting a 100+ first-nine but a 32% checkout percentage produces matches that consistently run longer than the totals line implies — the legs reach big trebles but don't close on the doubles. The structural lean on those matchups sits on Overs on total legs and on the most-180s market against the player profile.

Checkout Percentage & The Finishing Read

Checkout percentage is the share of double attempts a player converts into a finished leg. Elite finishers run at 40%+ over a televised session; the field average sits closer to 35%; struggling finishers fall to 30% or below. Checkout pairs with first-nine to give the complete scoring-and-finishing picture. A 40%+ finisher with a modest 95 first-nine is the structural lean on the moneyline against players who outscore but under-finish — the doubles close out the leg before the opponent's scoring power gets the chance to compound. Conversely, a 32% checkout player with elite first-nine scoring is the structural lean on the total-legs Over and the most-180s market when paired with another high-scorer.

180s Per Leg & The Combo Market Read

180s per leg is the third structural metric — the rate at which a player turns three darts into the maximum score across their visits. Elite scorers sit at 0.5 or higher 180s per leg; field-average players land at 0.3 to 0.4; lower-scoring players run below 0.25. The metric drives the most-180s match prop directly, but its real value sits in the combo markets — highest-checkout-by-named-player paired with total-180s, most-180s paired with match-winner, or 180-count combined with correct-score outcomes. The structural value sits in combo markets where the two underlying metrics both point in the same direction.

Live Betting — The Set Break & The Small-Sample Trap

Live in-play is where the homework compounds — and where casual bettors give back their edge. The brief calls it directly: a short hot streak on doubles in one match doesn't turn a 32% finisher into a 40% player over multiple matches. Don't get swayed by small sample sizes within a single match. The structural in-play windows are at the set breaks in long-format World Championship matches: a player who has come out of a 3-0 set with a tired throwing arm carries different prices into the next set than the form going in suggests. Players with documented slow-start patterns are the structural in-play backs after dropping the first set. Watch the practice routines between sets. Watch the body language. The break is where the sharper read pays.


The Rebel Edge

Lucky Rebel was built for bettors who read the first-nine sheet, not just the headline average. Crypto in, crypto out — Bitcoin, Ethereum, Tether, Litecoin, Bitcoin Cash, Bitcoin SV. $10 minimum across all darts markets. No cap on winnings. Live in-play pricing that moves leg-by-leg and throw-by-throw through every major broadcast. Deep coverage on every PDC World Championship match at Alexandra Palace, every Premier League night, every World Matchplay session in Blackpool, every Players Championship Final and the full Pro Tour, European Tour, World Series and MODUS Super Series calendars. Match winner, set and leg handicaps, totals, correct score, most 180s, highest checkout, nine-darter Yes/No, combo specials and the full tournament outright book — listed early, priced sharp, ready when you are.

Rebel Pick

Read the first nine. Fade the headline average.

Public money tracks the three-dart average on the broadcast scoreboard — the blended scoring-and-finishing number. Sharps separate them: first-nine isolates the scoring phase before the doubles game kicks in. A player running a 100+ first-nine but a 32% checkout is producing matches longer than the totals line implies, with more 180s than the headline average suggests. The matchups where one player's first-nine outpaces their checkout are the structural reads on the total-legs Over and the most-180s market. Read the first-nine. The broadcast scoreboard catches up by the deciding set.


FAQ — Darts Betting at Lucky Rebel

What darts can I bet on at Lucky Rebel?

Lucky Rebel runs full markets on the PDC World Championship at Alexandra Palace every December and January, Premier League Darts across the February-to-May weekly tour, the World Matchplay at the Winter Gardens in Blackpool every July, the Players Championship Finals every November, the full PDC Pro Tour, the European Tour, the World Series of Darts and the MODUS Super Series. Plus the World Grand Prix, the UK Open, the Masters and the World Cup of Darts when those calendars are live.

Can I bet on darts with crypto at Lucky Rebel?

Yes. Lucky Rebel accepts Bitcoin, Ethereum, Tether, Litecoin, Bitcoin Cash and Bitcoin SV alongside USD via Visa and Mastercard. Crypto deposits and withdrawals are faster, carry higher limits, and come with the privacy Rebels expect. Minimum bet $10. No cap on winnings.

What’s the difference between the Match Winner and the Set/Leg Handicap?

The Match Winner (moneyline) is a straight outright bet on which player wins the match — no handicap, no leg adjustment. The Set or Leg Handicap applies a spread to one player: a favourite at -2.5 legs needs to win by 3 legs or more; the underdog at +2.5 legs covers if they lose by 2 or fewer (or wins outright). In matches with a clear scoring-average gap, the moneyline pays barely anything on the favourite. The handicap is where the per-leg value sits. The format determines the line: best-of-7 leg matches sit at -1.5, best-of-11 at -2.5, the World Championship best-of-X-sets formats use set handicaps at -1.5 or -2.5.

What is first-nine average and why does it matter?

First-nine average is the average score per visit across the first three visits of each leg — the pure scoring phase before the finishing phase. Elite professional players sit between 95 and 105 on first-nine averages; the very best can push above 110 across a session. The metric matters because the public prices off the overall three-dart average, which blends scoring and finishing into a single number. Sharps separate them: first-nine isolates pure scoring power, which is more predictive than the headline average for totals on legs, sets and 180-based markets. A player posting a 100+ first-nine but a 32% checkout percentage is way more suited to Overs on total legs and most-180s markets than the headline average suggests.

When should I place my darts bets?

Tournament outrights open at their widest spread in the weeks before the event begins, with the World Championship outright opening in September for the December-January edition. For individual matches, the timing edge lives in the practice-room reports — a player who has been throwing well in the warm-up sessions before the broadcast can swing the moneyline within an hour of the walk-on. The most volatile timing window is between sessions on the longer formats: a player who has come out of an afternoon best-of-19 with a tired throwing arm carries different prices into the evening session than the form going in suggests. Watch the body language at the press conferences before the next round.

When are World Championship outrights most valuable?

The PDC World Championship outright opens in September with the longest-odds prices of the cycle. The top eight seeds at Alexandra Palace are typically priced inside +800 by the time the draw is made in late November; the +2000 to +10000 band is where the structural value lives on first-time semifinalists and on players hitting peak form in the autumn Pro Tour events. Premier League outrights open in February with the eight-player season-long format; the structural value sits on the second-tier players in the Premier League field who have a soft early run of weekly fixtures. World Matchplay outrights open in June after the European Tour ranking events compress the field for the Blackpool draw.

What is checkout percentage and how does it relate to darts betting?

Checkout percentage is the share of double attempts a player converts into a finished leg. Elite finishers run at 40%+ over a televised session; the field average sits closer to 35%; struggling finishers fall to 30% or below. The metric pairs with first-nine average to give a complete scoring-and-finishing picture. A player with elite first-nine scoring but a 32% checkout is leaving doubles on the wire, which opens up the opponent to hold service on leg-by-leg play and produces more total legs than the headline average suggests. The structural value sits on the total-legs Over and the most-180s markets against that player profile. Conversely, a 40%+ finisher with a modest 95 first-nine is the structural lean on the moneyline against players who outscore but under-finish.

Are PDC World Championship markets different from regular tour events?

Yes. The PDC World Championship runs the longest formats of any darts event on the calendar — best-of-5 sets in the first round expanding through best-of-7, best-of-9, best-of-11 in the semis and a best-of-13 set final. Each set is itself a first-to-three legs format, which produces matches that can run to 50+ legs played on the final stage. The longer the format, the more the underlying scoring and finishing percentages compound, which means the deeper-stat reads (first-nine, checkout, 180s per leg) carry more pricing weight than they do on the best-of-11 leg Players Championship floors. The World Championship prop book also runs deeper than any other event because the broadcast cycle stretches across three weeks at Alexandra Palace.


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