Frazer Clarke vs Justis Huni Preview April 11th, 2026

There’s a good heavyweight tilt on tap this Saturday, April 11th as Frazer Clarke, who won a bronze medal for England as a super heavyweight at the 2021 Olympics in Tokyo, meets Australia’s Justis Huni. The 10-rounder from London, England can be seen live in most nations on Netflix. Clarke last fought in November when he dropped a 12-round split decision to Jeamie Tshikeva for the vacant British Heavyweight Crown. Huni’s last outing resulted in a controversial 10th-round stoppage loss to Fabio Wardley while having a huge lead on all three judges’ scorecards. In his previous fight he halted Shaun Potgieter in two rounds to defend his IBF Pan Pacific and WBO Global Heavyweight Belts.
Clarke vs Huni Betting Odds
Here are the betting odds from online sportsbook BetOnline.ag (full review here).
- Frazer Clarke +800
- Justis Huni -1500
My Pick
The 34-year-old Clarke makes the ring walk with a mark of 9-2-1 with 7 Ko’s and has only 58 rounds of pro experience to his name since making his debut in 2022 and 40 of those rounds came in his last six fights, which were against Tshikeva, Ebenezer Tetteh, Fabio Wardley (twice), Dave Allen and Mariusz Wach. He has stopped Tetteh and Jake Darnell in one round; Ariel Bracamonte in two; Pencho Tsvetkov in one; Kevin Espinodla in four and Bogdan Dinu in two while being taken the six-round distance by Kamil Sokolowski, 10 rounds by Wach and 12 by Wardley and Tshikeva.
His first pro defeat came at the hands of Fabio Wardley in 148 seconds in a rematch for the British, and Commonwealth Heavyweight Titles in October, 2024. Clarke and Wardley first met seven months earlier and battled to a 12-round draw for the British, Commonwealth and European Heavyweight Belts. Clarke was down in the fifth round and was deducted a point in the seventh for repeated low blows.
Clarke’s first five opponents entered the ring with a combined record of 36-40 while Dinu, Allen, Wach Wardley and Tshikeva were all a step up in class. Clarke stands 6-feet-6-inches tall with a 78-inch reach and has shown fine power as a pro as with a 77.8 per cent knockout ratio in his victories. However he has won just one of his last four bouts with two losses and a draw. Clarke won numerous medals as an amateur where he had wins over Lenier Pero, Sergey Kuzmin and Tony Yoka but was stopped by Joe Joyce a couple of times as well as being beaten on points by Joyce. He also lost decisions to Yoka, Joseph Parker, Otto Wallin and Anthony Joshua.
Huni is 27 years old and makes the ring walk with a mark of 12-1 with 7 Ko’s and has 88 rounds of experience under his belt since making his pro debut in 2020. Before that he enjoyed a successful amateur career which saw him win a bronze medal at the 2019 World Championships and the gold at the 2016 Youth World Championships. As a pro, he stopped his first three opponents but has gone the distance in five of his last 10 outings for a current knockout ratio of 58.3 per cent in his victories.
Huni captured the Australian Heavyweight Crown in his first pro fight when he stopped Faiga Opelu in the seventh round. He defended it by halting Arsene Fosso in the fourth round, beating Christian Ndzie Tsoye by 10-round unanimous decision and stopping Paul Gallen in the 10th and final stanza. Huni added the vacant WBO Oriental, IBF Pan Pacific, and Oriental and Pacific Boxing Federation Heavyweight Titles with a 10-round unanimous decision over Joseph Goodall.
He defended all three titles via a 10-round unanimous decision over Kiki Toa Leutele in 2022. He then beat Andrew Tabiti by 10-round unanimous decision in November, 2023 and captured the vacant WBO Global Heavyweight Belt via a 10-round unanimous decision over Kevin Lerena in April, 2024 and defended it by stopping Troy Pilcher in the second round four months later. Huni measures 6-feet-4-inches tall with a 76.5-inch reach, so gives up two inches in height and 1.5-inches in reach to Clarke.
Prediction…
Clarke has the power to cause damage while Huni arguably possesses the better boxing skills. They have both been stopped by Fabio Wardley so don’t have perfect punch resistance. Huni is seven years younger but will really need to be be impressive to sway the generally home-sided judging and officiating in the UK. He was easily beating Wardley before being stopped controversially. If Huni can replicate his performance against Wardley he should leave the ring as the winner on Saturday but the odds are a bit wide in my opinion.
Clarke has struggled somewhat lately.
Play Huni -1500 @ BetOnline.ag
Check out my recent boxing betting picks to see my current form.
Frazer Clarke betting • Justis Huni betting
