Huni (12-1, 7 KOs) returns after the Fabio Wardley fight, where he controlled large parts of the night before being stopped in the tenth round by a right hand. Wardley has since picked up the WBO belt, adding context to the result. Huni now comes back into a different type of fight, one that tests his ability to hold distance for three minutes of every round.
Clarke (9-2-1, 7 KOs) brings a physical approach. He steps in behind the jab, cuts the ring, and forces exchanges once he gets close. His work is built around pressure and making opponents fight at his pace, especially on the inside.
Huni’s gameplan is clear. He keeps the lead hand active, works behind straight shots, and lets combinations go when he has space. His edge is hand speed and decision-making. He picks his shots and avoids staying in front longer than needed.
Clarke’s strength is durability and presence. He keeps coming, closes distance, and makes every exchange physical. If he gets chest-to-chest, he can slow the fight and disrupt rhythm.
The game plan is clear. Huni has to keep Clarke at range, keep him moving, and win rounds with clean punching. Clarke has to close distance early and force the fight into tight exchanges.
Huni works behind straight shots and lets combinations go once he has position. Clarke presses forward, works behind his jab, and forces exchanges inside. Distance decides the fight.
If Huni establishes his rhythm early, he can stack rounds. If Clarke gets inside and stays there, the fight changes quickly.

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