Heavyweight Boxing
London, England, UK - The heavyweight division will take center stage once again as Justis Huni meets Frazer Clarke on the undercard of Tyson Fury vs. Arslanbek Makhmudov, set for April 11, 2026 at Tottenham Hotspur Stadium in London.

The event, headlined by Tyson Fury and Arslanbek Makhmudov, will stream globally on Netflix, giving Huni and Clarke one of the biggest stages available outside a world title fight.
For both men, this is more than an undercard assignment — it is a pivotal career moment.
Record: 14-1 (9 KOs)
Australia’s most technically polished heavyweight of the past decade, Huni enters this bout looking to firmly re-establish himself as a world-level contender.
A 2019 World Amateur Championship bronze medalist, Huni built his professional reputation on speed, balance, and textbook fundamentals. He operates behind a sharp jab, controls distance well, and prefers to outbox rather than outslug opponents.
His lone professional defeat came in a dramatic late stoppage loss to Fabio Wardley, a fight in which Huni controlled long stretches before being caught in the championship rounds. That bout revealed both his high-level skillset and the danger that exists at the elite end of the division.
Key factors for Huni:
A composed, disciplined performance here would reposition him firmly in the international heavyweight conversation.
Record: 9-2-1 (7 KOs)
Clarke brings size, physicality, and elite amateur credentials into the matchup. The 2018 Commonwealth Games gold medalist and Tokyo Olympic bronze medalist transitioned to the professional ranks with high expectations.
His pro career has been turbulent at times — including a split draw and first-round stoppage loss to Wardley, followed by a narrow split-decision setback in British-level competition. Yet Clarke remains dangerous. He is physically imposing, fundamentally sound, and capable of grinding opponents down with pressure and strength.
Key factors for Clarke:
Clarke’s path to victory likely involves disrupting Huni’s rhythm early, forcing exchanges, and turning the contest into a physically demanding heavyweight fight rather than a tactical boxing match.
This matchup shapes up as a classic contrast:
Huni — the mover and technician
vs.
Clarke — the enforcer and pressure fighter
If Huni controls range and exits safely after combinations, he can bank rounds with cleaner work. If Clarke closes distance consistently and imposes his strength, he can make the fight uncomfortable and potentially shift momentum with a single heavy exchange.
Both fighters share a common thread — each has been touched by setbacks at domestic level. On a global stage beneath Fury–Makhmudov, the winner takes a meaningful step forward; the loser faces a far more complicated rebuild.
With Netflix broadcasting worldwide and a stadium crowd in excess of 60,000 expected, visibility will not be an issue. The winner positions himself as a viable inclusion on future major cards and re-enters the upper-tier contender discussion.
In a heavyweight division constantly searching for depth beneath the champions, Huni vs. Clarke is not filler — it is a sorting mechanism.
April 11 will tell us which man still belongs in the long-term conversation.