Huni (12-1, 7 KOs) returns to the Fabio Wardley fight, where he controlled much of the night before being stopped by a right hand in the tenth round. Wardley has since picked up the WBO belt, adding context to the result. Huni now returns in a different kind of fight, one that tests his ability to keep his distance for three minutes of each round.
Clarke (9-2-1, 7 KOs) brings a physical approach. He gets behind the jab, cuts off the ring and forces turnovers as soon as he gets close. His job is built around pressure and making opponents fight his pace, especially on the inside.
Huni’s game plan is clear. He keeps the main hand active, works behind straight shots, and lets combos go when he has space. His edge is hand speed and decision making. He chooses his shots and avoids staying in front longer than necessary.
Clarke’s strength is durability and presence. He keeps coming, distancing himself and making every exchange physical. If he gets chest-to-chest, he can slow down the fight and disrupt rhythm.
The game plan is clear. Huni needs to keep Clarke at bay, keep him moving and win rounds with clean hitting. Clarke needs to close distance early and force the fight into close exchanges.
Huni works behind straight shots and lets combos go once he has position. Clarke pushes forward, works behind his jab and forces exchanges inside. Distance determines the battle.
If Huni establishes his rhythm early, he can stack rounds. If Clarke enters and stays there, the fight changes quickly.



