LONDON - Unbeaten Deontay Wilder will have a ringside view of rival heavyweight champions Anthony Joshua and Wladimir Klitschko in their unification showdown at Wembley Stadium on Saturday, with hopes to fight the winner by December.
The 31-year-old American, who owns the World Boxing Council crown, will serve as a television analyst when Britain's unbeaten Joshua (18-0, 18 KO) defends his International Boxing Federation crown and vies for the vacant World Boxing Association title against Ukraine's Klitschko (64-4, 53 KO), before a sellout crowd of more than 90,000.
"I'm excited to see it," said Wilder, who owns a record of 38-0, with 37 knockouts.
"I'm looking forward to getting my own bird's-eye view of both fighters for a future fight. I'm definitely going there to scout. I'm looking for a fighting partner."
When it comes to picking a winner, Wilder is torn, saying, "My heart goes to Joshua but my mind says Klitschko will win."
Wilder has owned the WBC crown for two years and wants a July fight with New Zealand's unbeaten Joseph Parker, the World Boxing Organization champion, with the winner to meet the Joshua-Klitschko victor.
"Whoever unifies is going to bring another era to the heavyweight division - one name, one champion, once and for all. Undisputed. It's going to be better for boxing. You'll see a different atmosphere," Wilder said.
"I'm confident I'm the best in the division. I will unify the division. I'm just being patient and waiting for my time to come."
Parker, 22-0 with 18 knockouts, had a May fight against Britain's Hughie Fury called off on Saturday.
"I want Parker in July," Wilder said. "Why not? He don't have any opponent now. Let's unify. Let's make it happen. It makes so much sense.
"What would be better than me fighting Parker and then at the end of the year fighting for one undisputed title? I'm looking forward to unifying this division and bringing it back to America."
Wilder took some verbal swipes at Joshua and Klitschko, citing the Englishman's past foes as lackluster and the ex-champion as possibly too far past his prime.
"There's a lot of flaws in Joshua," Wilder said. "He's still young in the game. He's going off the physique and the height. But if you soul-search deep down and look at his resume, you'll get your answer.
"He has the power. At any given time he can get you out of there. He's definitely going to have to move and take angles with Klitschko, but I think he has a chance."
Klitschko, who has sparred more than 50 rounds with Wilder over the years, is 41 and lost his title to Tyson Fury in his most recent fight 17 months ago.
"I hope Klitschko brings Klitschko. I think he's ready. He's going to show a lot of things," said Wilder.
"He's going to teach Joshua a lot of things during this fight. Sometimes you have to let them know 'I'm still a monster'."
Wilder said he plans to visit Kenya next month and Jordan next year to investigate possible fights in those countries and vowed: "If it's safe, I'll go anywhere in the world."
After failed doping tests scuttled two prior title fights, Wilder insists on Nevada-style drug tests for any foe.
"You better be clean by the time you fight me 'cause we're going to find out about it real quick," he said.
"And even if you're doped, I'll still whoop you."
Pacquiao out to prove a point
Eight-division world champion Manny Pacquiao said on Monday he plans to show he is "not done yet" when he defends his WBO welterweight title against Australia's Jeff Horn in Brisbane in July.
The Filipino veteran said the bout with the undefeated Horn is an opportunity to prove he can continue to be a global force at the age of 38 as he juggles boxing with a full-time job in politics.
"I want to defend my crown and prove that I'm still there in boxing, despite my ambitions in carrying out my duties as a senator," he said during an Australian tour to promote the July 2 bout.
"I'm still handling my boxing career. I'm still there. I'm not done yet in boxing."
Pacquiao first won a world championship at flyweight (112lb), two weeks before his 20th birthday in December 1998 to launch a storied career that has seen him win global belts all the way up to super welterweight (154lb).
"Boxing is my passion. I have always loved it. I started when I was very young - it's part of my life," said Pacquiao.
"It depends on how you discipline yourself, how you train and prepare yourself. It's a matter of discipline."
Pacquiao, who briefly retired early last year before making a successful comeback against Jessie Vargas in Las Vegas in November, added that he was excited to face Horn, 29, at the 55,000-capacity Suncorp Stadium.
"I'm not going to predict the outcome of the fight, but I will do my best to entertain the fans," he said.
"I'm very excited to fight here, I've fought a lot of fighters in the US. This is new, and I'm excited. I can't wait for the fight."
Agence France-Presse