Two heavyweight prospects with big futures and recent setbacks to shake off collide at Tottenham Hotspur Stadium on April 11, 2026. Frazer “The Eraser” Clarke — Olympic bronze medallist, former British heavyweight title contender — arrives needing to rebuild after his December 2025 split decision defeat to Jeamie Tshikeva. His opponent, Justis “JPH” Huni, Australia’s most polished heavyweight prospect, is on his own comeback trail following a tenth-round stoppage at the hands of Fabio Wardley in June 2025. Two talented fighters. Two defeats. One platform on Netflix that neither can afford to waste.
| Date | Saturday, April 11, 2026 |
| Venue | Tottenham Hotspur Stadium, London, England |
| Division | Heavyweight |
| Scheduled Rounds | 10 |
| Broadcast | Netflix (Worldwide) |
Frazer Clarke (9-2-1, ~7 KOs) brought an extraordinary amateur pedigree into the professional ranks. The Burton-born Englishman represented Great Britain at the Tokyo 2020 Olympics, winning a bronze medal in the super heavyweight division, and turned pro in late 2022. His size — 6’6”, 78-inch reach — immediately marked him as a long-term heavyweight prospect.
But it’s been a bumpy road. The Fabio Wardley fights defined both the heights and the limits of Clarke’s career so far. A competitive draw in their first meeting (March 2024) showed he could mix it with Britain’s best; the TKO stoppage in round one of the rematch (October 2024) landed a brutal blow to his momentum. A first-round TKO win over Ebenezer Tetteh in April 2025 provided a confidence boost — before the Tshikeva defeat in December 2025 cost him a shot at the British heavyweight belt that he’d been circling for months. The painful irony: Tshikeva is defending that British title against Riakporhe on the same card tonight.
Nationality: England | Age: 33 | Stance: Orthodox Height: 6’6” / 198 cm | Reach: 78” / 198 cm | Debut: 2022
Recent Form:
| Result | Opponent | Method | Round |
|---|---|---|---|
| Draw | Fabio Wardley | SD | 12 |
| Loss | Fabio Wardley | TKO | R1 |
| Win | Ebenezer Tetteh | TKO | R1 |
| Loss | Jeamie Tshikeva | SD | 12 |
Justis Huni (12-1-0, ~9 KOs) is the kind of fighter who makes the heavyweight division exciting: technically gifted, well-schooled in the amateur tradition, and still developing at 26. The Brisbane-born heavyweight — son of former professional fighter Donnie Huni — represented Australia at the Tokyo Olympics and has methodically worked his way up the professional rankings since turning pro in 2020.
At 26, Huni has beaten 12 opponents in 88 professional rounds, averaging a fight length that suggests comfort both in early finishes and at full distance. His losses — just one — came against the current British and European heavyweight champion Fabio Wardley in June 2025. Huni was competitive for nine rounds before a Wardley knockout in round ten. That’s a key data point: he was ahead on points before the late drama. It wasn’t a shutout. But a late KO loss on a big stage carries psychological weight, and his response on April 11 will tell us a great deal about his mentality.
Nationality: Australia | Age: 26 | Stance: Orthodox Height: 6’4” / 193 cm | Reach: 76.4” / 194 cm | Debut: 2020
Recent Form:
| Result | Opponent | Method | Round |
|---|---|---|---|
| Win | Andrew Tabiti | UD | 10 |
| Win | Kevin Lerena | UD | 10 |
| Win | Troy Pilcher | TKO | R2 |
| Win | Shaun Potgieter | TKO | R2 |
| Loss | Fabio Wardley | KO | R10 |
| Clarke | Huni | |
|---|---|---|
| Age | 33 | 26 |
| Record | 9-2-1 | 12-1-0 |
| KOs | ~7 (78%) | ~9 (75%) |
| Height | 6’6” / 198 cm | 6’4” / 193 cm |
| Reach | 78” / 198 cm | 76.4” / 194 cm |
| Stance | Orthodox | Orthodox |
| Rounds Fought | 46 | 88 |
| Debut | 2022 | 2020 |
Huni has fought nearly twice as many professional rounds as Clarke despite having two fewer years as a professional — 88 rounds vs 46. That extra ring time, combined with Huni’s seven-year age advantage, gives him a meaningful edge in boxing maturity, even if Clarke’s amateur experience and size compensate somewhat.
Both fighters are orthodox and physically similar in style, which means the technical margins matter enormously. Clarke’s game is built around his 6’6” frame: establishing the jab to control range, then working behind a left hook that can be sharp when he gets into rhythm. His issue historically has been defensive lapses — Wardley and Tshikeva both found ways through his guard when he was caught in exchanges.
Huni is the more complete technical boxer. His amateur background — and the fact that he fought Wardley competitively for nine rounds, a fight Clarke himself has been unable to win convincingly — suggests superior ring craft. His footwork, head movement, and punch selection give him tools that can frustrate a size-based fighter. At 26 with 88 rounds of experience, he still has meaningful ceiling to improve.
The X-factor for Clarke: home advantage at Tottenham in front of a packed British crowd, on a Netflix card with the biggest possible spotlight. Clarke fighting with a point to prove, in front of his people, could produce his best performance.
Frazer Clarke must:
Justis Huni must:
This is a genuinely close fight. Huni’s technical skills, youth, and extra ring time are offset by Clarke’s home advantage, physical size, and desperation to prove himself after the Tshikeva defeat. At Tottenham, on the biggest stage of his career, we expect Clarke’s motivation to carry him.
Our pick: Frazer Clarke by SD 10 rounds — home advantage, size, and hunger just edge it, but Huni pushes him every step of the way.
| Country | Broadcaster | UK Time | US Time |
|---|---|---|---|
| United Kingdom | Netflix | ~6:00 PM BST | — |
| United States | Netflix | — | ~1:00 PM ET |
| Worldwide | Netflix | varies | varies |
Clarke vs Huni is expected to be among the first main card bouts, with ring walk around 6:00–6:30 PM BST / 1:00–1:30 PM ET on Saturday, April 11.
Don’t miss the rest of this stacked card: Tyson Fury vs Arslanbek Makhmudov main event preview, Conor Benn vs Regis Prograis preview, and Richard Riakporhe vs Jeamie Tshikeva British Heavyweight Title preview.
When is Clarke vs Huni? April 11, 2026, at Tottenham Hotspur Stadium in London, on the Fury vs Makhmudov undercard.
How to watch Clarke vs Huni? Live on Netflix worldwide — included with any standard Netflix subscription.
Is Frazer Clarke an Olympian? Yes — Clarke represented Great Britain at the Tokyo 2020 Olympics and won a bronze medal in the super heavyweight division.
Is Justis Huni an Olympian? Yes — Huni represented Australia at the Tokyo 2020 Olympics. He turned professional shortly after.
What is Frazer Clarke’s record? Clarke is 9-2-1. His losses came against Fabio Wardley (TKO R1, October 2024) and Jeamie Tshikeva (SD, December 2025). He also fought Wardley to a split decision draw in March 2024.
What is Justis Huni’s record? Huni is 12-1-0. His only professional defeat came against WBC/WBO heavyweight champion Fabio Wardley, who knocked him out in round 10 in June 2025.
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