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Scottish Sun
11 minutes ago
- Scottish Sun
‘I love the chaos' – Why Fabio Wardley's fight with Justis Huni won't even be the biggest night of his month
Click to share on X/Twitter (Opens in new window) Click to share on Facebook (Opens in new window) FABIO WARDLEY has the two most important nights of his life inside the next 10 DAYS. Ipswich's 30-year-old former recruitment worker and white-collar boxer headlines Portman Road on Saturday night against tough Australian Justis Huni. 3 Fabio Wardley ahead of fighting Justis Huni Credit: Getty And on June 16 his partner is scheduled to give birth to his first child, a bouncing baby girl. For anyone else, the nail-biting fortnight would be a crippling rollercoaster of emotions impossible to combine. But the Suffolk Puncher - who went on an Oleksandr Usyk sparring trip to Ukraine in 2018 when he barely knew how to throw a jab - is loving the chaos. The class act told SunSport: 'June 2025 is going to be a wild month I talk a lot about, for the rest of my life. READ MORE IN BOXING Wardley vs Huni All the details you need ahead of huge homecoming bout 'I will be an old man in a rocking chair, telling people about it and wondering how we pulled it off. 'Everything has come together at the same time, it might seem a bit hectic but I wouldn't have it any other way. I thrive on it, I love the chaos.' Nine months ago, the 18-0-1 ace got the wonderful news he would be a dad for the first time. And a few weeks later he got the offer of a lifetime, to headline at his boyhood football club, a chance that some Olympic and world champions never get. 3 Wardley and his girlfriend are expecting their first child together Credit: Instagram @fabiowardley CASINO SPECIAL - BEST CASINO BONUSES FROM £10 DEPOSITS It seems like a psychological and logistical nightmare that would be destined for the divorce courts but Team Wardley is way too tight. 'If my little girl is anything like me, then she'll be chilled out and late, which will give me a little bit more time to decompress from the fight,' he grinned. Fabio Wardley faces off with Justis Huni ahead of his homecoming fight 'The flight date has been moved around a few times but my missus has been unbelievable. 'I have just promised to her that, as soon as Saturday night is over, I am all theirs. 'This week, though, is just my week. I need to be totally focused on me and then it's all on them.' Wardley - who cracked 2020 Olympic bronze winner Frazer Clarke's skull in their one-round rematch in October - somehow combines being a brutal boxer with being a lovely bloke and he insists that won't change with another win or a baby. 'I don't know how parenthood will affect me,' he said. 'I do plan to be the fun-dad though. I want mum to do the telling off. 'I think I will always be driven to push myself in everything, though. Everything has come together at the same time, it might seem a bit hectic but I wouldn't have it any other way. I thrive on it, I love the chaos. 'That's something just innate in me. And I am sure I will need to feed and stoke that fire regularly.' One thing Wardley would NEVER do, despite the baffling suggestion from some clumsy pundits, is fight his mentor and pal Dillian Whyte. After following all of Wardley's career, we were stunned to hear the idea even mooted and Wardley floored it. 'You're 100 per cent right, for once.' he laughed. 'From the second it would be announced, everybody who knows the sport and who knows us, would know it would be fake and not something I would ever do, because of the amount of love, respect and admiration I have for Dills. 'People go on about my story, white-collar, coming from nowhere, sparring Usyk. "But none of that is possible without Dillian at the beginning, giving me all of these opportunities. So I would never spit in his face and fight him. 'Even if all the sanctioning bodies called for the fight and somebody was silly enough to put all the money up, I would take a knee in the first round and give him the win.'


Daily Mirror
16 minutes ago
- Daily Mirror
Barry McGuigan picks his winner in intriguing Fabio Wardley vs Justis Huni fight
For the second time in his career Fabio Wardley's white-collar background faces the elite amateur test. It took two bouts to prevail against Olympic bronze medallist Frazer Clarke, but the emphatic nature of his victory in the rematch highlights the scale of the challenge facing former World Amateur bronze medallist Justis Huni. The Australian took the fight at five week's notice following the withdrawal of Jarrell Miller. He either needs the money or fancies his chances of fast-tracking his career in Ipswich. Wardley did not follow the traditional amateur route. It is easy to be dismissive of his white-collar background. I note Teddy Atlas has bet 1,500 dollars on a Huni win. I'm not so sure. Professional boxing is significantly different to the amateurs. It tests fighters in different ways. In Wardley's case the traditional route is irrelevant. He is established as a pro and that's what counts. I get it. If you are looking at talent alone you could not pick better than Huni. He is a good all-round fighter. He moves well, has great timing and fast hands. But it's the quality you can't measure that makes the difference. You can't stick a tape measure around the stuff that gets you over the line. But you can feel it. For me Huni lacks a bit of bite. He does not have enough want in him. I'm not sure he can get on the gas and get after people. Wardley has proved himself in that regard. Getting this far via the white collar route is testimony to that. I watched Huni against big-punching Kevin Lerena, who dropped Daniel Dubois twice. Huni was hurt but he recovered quickly and won the fight. But Wardley is a tougher prospect than Lerena. At 6ft 5ins he is a modern heavy and he showed against Clarke that he can dig deep. After Lerena, Huni probably thinks Wardley does not hit any harder. I think he will be surprised. I sense Wardley will be a little too sharp for this guy. I'm just not convinced by Huni. He's a talented fighter but perhaps is missing that last ten percent that makes the difference at this level. He is not a devastating puncher yet he likes to exchange and that makes him vulnerable. He might look good early but I don't think he has enough about him to hold off Wardley. I think the local boy knocks him out in the last third, or even earlier, to set Portman Road alight. Sky has slashed the price of its bundle ahead of the 2025/26 season, saving members £192 and offering more than 1,400 live matches across the Premier League, EFL and more. Sky will show at least 215 live Premier League games next season, an increase of up to 100 more.


Daily Record
an hour ago
- Daily Record
Holidaymakers branded 'mad' as they race to secure sunbed at Spanish hotel
The hilarious scenes, captured by one tourist, shows Brits queueing and sprinting to get their towel on a lounger after queuing for an hour Holidays are supposed to be relaxing - but there's one thing that's sure to stress you out on your well-earned break. Sunbed wars are a very real part of the holiday experience for thousands of tourists as the battle for a lounger begins very early in the morning in some resorts. And British holidaymakers have been dubbed 'towel warriors' after a comical video was posted showing the race for a prime spot around the pool at one Mallorca hotel. The footage was captured by Aaron Turner, 34 while he was on holiday with his fiancée Shauna Wall, 32, and their four-year-old daughter Halle. Aaron filmed the scenes at the Hotel Sol Barbados, Magaluf which saw holidaymakers queueing up, poised to be ready to sprint to the sunbeds as soon as the pool areas was opened, reports the Mirror. And Aaron, a full time content creator from Country Meath, Ireland said, every morning, they were waiting for a full hour before the opening time in anticipation of securing the best spot for the day. The video, posted to Instagram, shows sun-seekers ready and waiting at three entrances to the hotel's pool, despite their appearing to be plenty of loungers laid out. He said: "The queues would get pretty long. Once the barriers opened, all the rules went - people were jumping the queue, and some were properly running," he said. And he also highlighted the surplus of sunbeds yet pointed out that everyone was after the most coveted spots. Finding amusement in the situation, Aaron added: "I thought it was hilarious, I've seen videos of it online before but it was the first time I experienced it myself. We got a good laugh out of it." Captioning his funny video 'Sunbed races should be an Olympic sport', it shows him pretending to stretch his legs as a warm up before getting ready to join the race. Aaron's followers were quick to comment on the ludicrousness of the situation. One said: "Or you can do what I do go have breakfast and nice relaxing morning then just walk in and throw the towels off the beds I want because you can't save sun loungers." Another laughed: 'Man, this is madness'. Sunbed wars are a long-standing, long-drawn-out battle that typically marks the start of the summer. Earlier this week, the Mirror reported how a group of irate holidaymakers thwarted a cunning plan by fellow Brits to bag sun beds seven hours before their hotel pool opened on a recent Spain holiday. While having a late-night chinwag on their balcony, Mandy Boyd spotted some lads she thought were having a cheeky swim in the pool. But upon closer inspection, the 34-year-old realised the young men were trying to nab the best beds at 2am, despite the fact that the pool wasn't due to open until 9am the next day. The quartet of girls watched as the lads dragged out their sun loungers to try and secure prime spots. Mandy and her mates patiently waited on the balcony for the perfect moment to dash down and swipe the towels. The comical sun bed wars sabotage took place around 2am at the Aquasol Aparthotel, Palmanova, near Magaluf, Spain. Joined by her mate, Sally Willows, the pair dashed down to the pool and swiftly grabbed the towels. "We're just doing the Lord's work," Mandy from Bridgend, South Wales, said. "I can't stand it when people reserve sunbeds and don't use them all day. "I find it really inconsiderate. It was shocking to see them reserving beds at 2am, especially when there was no chance of those lads being up to enjoy them. We kept the towels, but made sure we left them where they would find them."