Justis Huni: Fabio Wardley's family crowd won't scare me - My house got shot

Justis Huni knew that when he went out to fight Fabio Wardley on Portman Road on June 7, he would face an atmosphere of hostility, but that wouldn't shock him.

Once you realize he's going through something, you understand why.

The Huns (12-0, 7 Kos) paid time for the fight, saying that if they beat Wardley (19-0-1, 17 KOS), he would "change his life." The Australian, a replacement for Jarrell Miller, stepped up in the six-week notice, but said he was ready.

He has settled in Blackpool, northwest England for training camp. Although it is a coastal town, it is far from the blue skies on the Sands and Australia's Gold Coast.

Anyway, his house was shot dead from round about five days in the early hours of the morning before the 2022 battle with Joseph Goodall.

Henny told the media while reflecting on the incident: "It's terrible. I lived in the house that night, and the whole family was in the house, even my nephew and niece."

The Huns were a rising star in Australia and the attack attracted immediate attention. But, in the struggle to win in just a few days, he lowered his head and just kept moving forward. That morning, he went to accompany him as usual.

“There are all the police and TV people in the front of my house…I had a fight that morning. I just looked directly at it and left. I finished my company and went back to So (many) reporters.

“It’s timing is crazy.”

The biggest battle will be the biggest battle in front of the largest crowd in the Ipswich Town Football Club House, and the Huns have been facing questions about how he will deal with the occasion. On the day of reflection on 2022, the Huns said that if he could handle it, thousands of opponents would work easily.

“Everything is character building, everything has brought me to where I am today and (for me) able to bring the obstacles that I am about to appear on June 7 in the past.

“Everything in my life has a reason.”

The spell serves him well through various adversities throughout his career. He was a gold medal hope before the Tokyo Olympics, but was forced to withdraw from the competition after breaking his hand on the eve of the Olympics.

Now, he finally has the opportunity to announce himself in the Northern Hemisphere.

With members of Oleksandr Usyk, Anthony Joshua and Tyson Fury, Young Up and Comers gradually reached their respective profession homes, striving to be the best place in the department. Daniel Dubois has built himself, and both Huni and Wardley think they can take action.

"That's one of the reasons I've been doing this fight in such a short notice. It's life-changing, it's such a big fight in this point in my career," Henny said.

"For my future, my career and the future battles I'm going to have, it's huge for me. This battle takes a big role in where I want to go next."