
György Jehirszki will make his big stage return in July’s Superbet Poland Darts Masters, after winning through last Thursday's Hungarian Qualifier.
Jehirszki made his World Series of Darts debut in Gliwice 12 months ago, and he also featured on the European Tour at the Austrian Darts Open in Graz earlier this month.
The 41-year-old confirmed his Poland Darts Masters qualification with a 6-2 success against four-time World Cup qualifier Janos Vegso, winning five of the last six legs to confirm his spot in the 16-player event.
Jehirszki kicked off his campaign with victory over Richard Balogh, before whitewashing Jozsef Beke and Milan Lovei to race through to the quarter-finals.
The Hungarian extended his run of winning legs to 17 with a 6-3 win against Levente Antal in the last eight, before defying a late fightback from Patrik Kovacs to record a 6-4 victory in the semi-finals.
The third staging of the Poland Darts Masters will take place at the PreZero Arena on July 4-5, as reigning champion Luke Littler and 2023 winner Michael van Gerwen prepare to headline this summer’s showpiece.
Former World Champions Gerwyn Price and Rob Cross will also feature, with Stephen Bunting, Jonny Clayton, Nathan Aspinall and Chris Dobey completing the list of eight PDC superstars.
Poland’s premier player Krzysztof Ratajski will take centre stage on home soil, alongside his fellow countrymen Radek Szaganski, Sebastian Bialecki and Tytus Kanik.
Croatia’s Pero Ljubic will make his World Series debut in Gliwice, while Czech number one Karel Sedlacek and Jehirszki will be joined by an additional East Europe qualifier that will be confirmed in due course.
Superbet Poland Darts Masters
July 4-5, PreZero Arena Gliwice
PDC Representatives
Luke Littler (England)
Michael van Gerwen (Netherlands)
Stephen Bunting (England)
Rob Cross (England)
Gerwyn Price (Wales)
Jonny Clayton (Wales)
Chris Dobey (England)
Nathan Aspinall (England)
East Europe Representatives
Krzysztof Ratajski (Poland)
Radek Szaganski (Poland)
Sebastian Bialecki (Poland)
Tytus Kanik (Poland)
Karel Sedlacek (Czech Republic)
Pero Ljubic (Croatia)
Gyorgy Jehirszki (Hungary)
Polish Qualifier