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Justis Huni
Australian boxer From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
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Justis Huni (born 4 April 1999) is an Australian professional boxer. He has challenged once for the WBA interim heavyweight title in June 2025. At regional level, he has held multiple heavyweight championships, including the Australian title from 2020 to 2021. As an amateur, he won a bronze medal at the 2019 World Championships.[1]
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Early life
Huni was born on 4 April 1999 in Meadowbrook,[2] a suburb of Logan City, in the metropolitan area of Brisbane, Queensland.[3] He is of Tongan, Swedish, Samoan and Dutch descent.[4] His first sporting love was rugby league where he began playing for the Souths Sunnybank Magpies as a child but gave away the sport at the age of eight to pursue a career in boxing.[5]
Amateur career
World Championships result
Yekaterinburg 2019
- First round: Defeated Cristian Salcedo (Colombia) 5–0
- Second round: Defeated Nigel Paul (Trinidad and Tobago) RSC
- Quarter-finals: Defeated Mahammad Abdullayev (Azerbaijan) 5–0
- Semi-finals: Defeated by Kamshybek Kunkabayev (Kazakhstan) W/O
Professional career
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Early career
On 22 October 2020, Huni made his professional debut against Australian heavyweight champion, Faiga Opelu. Huni dominated throughout the bout and in the seventh round, he secured victory after his opponent's corner threw in the towel to protect Opelu from further damage.[6]
On 3 December 2020, Huni fought for the second time as a professional against Arsene Fosso. After controlling the opening three rounds, referee Phil Austin called a halt to the fight in the fourth round after Fosso took a number of heavy blows from Huni.[7][8]
Huni had three more professional fights in the first half of 2021, knocking out Jack Maris on 10 April and defeating Christian Tsoye by unanimous decision on 26 May to retain his Australian heavyweight title. His most publicised fight took place on 16 June, when Huni entered the ring against ex-rugby league player, turned professional boxer, Paul Gallen. In what was a bruising encounter, Huni controlled the fight and overcame his 39-year-old opponent in the 10th round after knocking him to the ground. The referee declared the fight over with Huni improving his record to 5–0 while handing Gallen his first defeat.[9]
Huni was set to represent Australia at the 2020 Summer Olympics in Tokyo in the super-heavyweight division but was ruled out due to injury.[10]
On October 28, 2023 in Cancun, Mexico, Huni was scheduled to face Andrew Tabiti for the WBA International heavyweight title.[11] Huni won the fight by unanimous decision.[12]
On March 8, 2024 in Riyadh, Saudi Arabia, Huni defeated Kevin Lerena by unanimous decision.[13]
Filling in for Jarrell Miller, who pulled out of the bout on April 30, Huni faced Fabio Wardley on June 7, 2025, at Portman Road in Ipswich, England for the vacant WBA interim heavyweight title. Huni outboxed Wardley for nine rounds and was well ahead on the scorecards before he was suddenly knocked out in the tenth round. It was the first loss of Huni's career.[14]
Professional boxing record
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References
External links
Wikiwand - on
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