By Edward Chaykovsky

IBF heavyweight champion Anthony Joshua (17-0, 17KOs) has no problem facing former two division champion David Haye next year.

Haye (28-2, 26KOs) believes Joshua's promoted, Eddie Hearn of Matchroom, is avoiding the fight.

The 2012 Olympic gold medal winner already has a very busy schedule, with a defense against Eric Molina on Saturday in Manchester and then a showdown with Wladimir Klitschko next April.

Haye is heading into the ring with another Hearn fighter, WBC cruiserweight champion Tony Bellew, on March 4th at the O2 Arena in London.

The Hayemaker is confident of taking Joshua out - and doing it rather easily.

“I see holes in him, every time I see him,” said Haye. “I see it in his footwork, in his punch evasion or lack of, I see it in his speed of punches, tempo, rhythm - I see it in every part. The way he responds to being punched, the way he responds when punches are thrown at him.

“All these things, I put in my computer of a brain and it tallies up to a two or three-round knock-out and there’s nothing he can do to counteract that. Not right now, not if he does what he has been doing. If he does something I’ve never seen before in his next fights against Molina and against Klitschko, then I might have to recalculate, but right now everything I have seen up until now tells me it’s a fun night for me. It’s one I could actually enjoy and have a fun fight with someone who is as robotic as he is.”

Joshua has no problem facing Haye next summer, provided both of them overcome their upcoming assignments. He rejects the claims being made by Haye of avoiding a potential fight.

"David keeps saying what he's going to do to me and how I will avoid him," Joshua said in the Daily Mail.

"Well, if he can get through his March fight with Tony Bellew I will be absolutely fine about fighting him. He's a good boxer and he's turning ours into a fight the people want. Sometimes that's how it works and I'm OK with that."