Justis Huni handed Frazer Clarke his second defeat in four months with a majority decision victory at Tottenham Hotspur Stadium. Scores read 94-96, 94-96 — with one judge seeing it level at 95-95, reflecting a genuinely competitive second half. But the first three rounds told the real story of this fight. Huni came out fast, landed hard, and built a lead that Clarke — despite a credible mid-fight rally — could never fully dismantle.
| Winner | Justis Huni |
| Method | Majority Decision |
| Scorecards | 95-95, 94-96, 94-96 |
| Venue | Tottenham Hotspur Stadium, April 11, 2026 |
In a 10-round fight, the opening third matters enormously. You can overcome a slow start — but only if you have the rounds to make it up and the consistency to win them back. Huni’s opening blitz left Clarke with neither.
Across Rounds 1, 2, and 3, Huni landed 56 punches to Clarke’s 30 — nearly double the output. His accuracy over those frames averaged around 46%, and he was connecting cleanly at range with his jab (9 of 18 in R1, 10 of 26 in R2) while also landing heavy power shots. Round 3 was the high-water mark: 22 punches from 45 thrown (48.9%) with 15 power shots from 23 attempted (65.2%). Huni landed more in Round 3 alone than Clarke managed in any single round of the entire fight.
The scorecards after three rounds were not close. And at heavyweight, where opponents hit hard enough to change the momentum in a single exchange, the fighter in front on a scorecard has an enormous psychological advantage in how they box the remaining rounds.
To his credit, Clarke didn’t capitulate. Round 4 was his best of the night — he landed 13 punches (including 12 power shots at 50% accuracy) and outscored Huni 13 to 11, producing the kind of physical, heavy-handed boxing that had brought him to this level. Round 7 was another positive frame, with Clarke edging the connect count again.
But the problem was the pattern. Clarke’s best work came in isolated rounds rather than sustained runs. He never put together two or three consecutive rounds of genuine dominance. In Rounds 5 and 6, Huni was still winning or matching him. By Round 8, Clarke was landing 12 per round against Huni’s 13 — close enough to win on another night, but not enough to overhaul the scorecards.
The 95-95 scorecard from one judge suggests Clarke came close to levelling the fight in the second half. The other two saw it clearly for Huni.
Over 10 rounds, Huni landed 147 punches (35.4%) to Clarke’s 110 (32.0%). The gap looks modest in percentage terms — but it’s built on Huni’s 107 power punches landed (44.0%) against Clarke’s 74 (36.5%). Huni hit harder and more often in the shots that score most heavily with judges. Clarke threw more jabs overall but converted at 25.5% against Huni’s 23.3% — both similar, but Huni’s power advantage ultimately separated them.
For context on how decisive the early rounds were: Huni’s punch advantage across Rounds 1-3 alone (56 to 30) accounts for more than the entire fight’s 37-punch gap. Clarke won the second half of the fight on connections — but he was chasing the result the whole time.
For Clarke, this is now two defeats in quick succession — December’s loss to Tshikeva (himself stopped tonight by Richard Riakporhe) followed by this. Both fights followed a similar pattern: Clarke competitive, Clarke capable, but Clarke unable to impose himself consistently enough to take control. At 33, the window to establish himself among the top heavyweights is narrowing.
For Huni, this is a significant step forward. The 26-year-old Australian was sharp, accurate, and strategically sound in the opening rounds when it mattered most. He landed 107 power punches at 44.0% accuracy — that’s an output capable of troubling anyone at domestic level. The next test will tell us whether this performance translates to the European stage.
Also on the card: Fury outclasses Makhmudov in dominant return → | Benn dominates Prograis by UD 98-92 → | Riakporhe stops Tshikeva for British Heavyweight Title →
Who won Clarke vs Huni? Justis Huni won by majority decision — two judges scored it 94-96, one scored it 95-95.
What decided the fight? Huni’s opening three rounds were decisive. He outscored Clarke 56-30 in connects across R1-3, with a 48.9% accuracy peak in Round 3, and Clarke never fully recovered the scorecards deficit.
What is Frazer Clarke’s record? Clarke falls to 9-3 (1 draw) — his second defeat in four months.
What is Justis Huni’s record? Huni improves to 13-1 with the majority decision victory.
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