It is the women’s Super Fight of New York boxing, worthy of a packed house and main event status. Amanda Serrano and Heather “The Heat” Hardy will meet on Friday, Sept. 13 in the Hulu Theater at Madison Square Garden for Hardy’s WBO women’s featherweight title.

It will part of the undercard supporting a main event that will pit Devin Haney (22-0, 14 KOs) of Las Vegas against Zaur Abdullaev (11-0, 7 KOs) of Russia in a lightweight title elimination bout. DAZN will live stream the bouts.

Serrano versus Hardy is an all-Brooklyn showdown between two friends who have carried the banner for women’s boxing in New York in recent years. Serrano (36-1-1, 27 KOs) has won titles in seven different weight divisions. She captured a junior bantamweight belt last January with a first-round knockout of Eva Voraberger and is looking to reclaim the belt Hardy (22-0, 4 KOs) won last October with a win over Shelly Vincent. The fight is being billed as: One Borough, Two Champions, One Winner.

“I’m really excited,” Serrano told The Post. “I know it’s going to be a great fight. I’m truly thankful to her because it’s been a while since I’ve fought for a belt. Most of the champions have been dodging me. It’s going to be good to go out and fight a champion.”

The bout has been five years in the making, but was delayed as both decided to compete in mixed martial arts in hopes of increasing their exposure and prize money. Hardy signed with Bellator and is 2-2 after losing in the first-round at Bellator 222 last June. Serrano is 1-0-1 in MMA fighting for Combate Americas. Both have put their MMA careers on hold to concentrate on boxing again.

“MMA is a totally different sport,” Serrano said. “It’s so much harder than boxing. Going back and forth was a little hard and frustrating. I did it for the recognition and the pay. Now that I’ve got a DAZN contract, I’m focusing on boxing and being on a good platform. That’s what women really need.”

Hardy, 37, and Serrano, 30, have both been strong, vocal proponents of women’s boxing, constantly pushing for more female fights to be televised. The networks are starting to embrace the concept, with fighters such as undisputed champions Claressa Shields and Katie Taylor of Ireland starting to gain global appeal for their skills. Hardy and Serrano fighting on DAZN is another step in that journey.

“It’s been frustrating, but it’s getting better,” Serrano said. “You’re getting to see a lot more women on platforms like DAZN. It’s too bad it’s happening so late in our careers, but as long as we can open doors for others, that’s good, too.”

Serrano is hoping a win over Hardy will lead to a fight with Taylor (14-0, 6 KOs), the undisputed women’s lightweight champion. But she’s not looking past her fellow Brooklynite.

“I’m a single mom from Brooklyn, just like her,” Serrano said of Hardy. “Heather is a true champion and doesn’t give up easily. Neither one of us wants to take a step back. We give it our all. There’s going to be no backing up from either of us.”

Anthony Joshua’s promoters said his world heavyweight title rematch against Andy Ruiz Jr. will take place in Diriyah, Saudi Arabia, on Dec. 7.

The British fighter will be trying to win back the IBF, WBA and WBO belts he lost to Ruiz at the Garden on June 1.

Diriyah is a town on the outskirts of Riyadh, the Saudi Arabian capital.

— With AP