Dillian Whyte would be very interesting in getting it on with his most hated domestic rival, Anthony Joshua.

Whyte defeated Joshua in the amateurs, but the British superstar got revenge when they collided in December 2015. Whyte rocked Joshua early on in the fight, but could hold off the unbeaten champion in the later rounds, as Joshua walked away with a seventh round stoppage win.

Joshua is preparing for an IBF, IBO, WBA, WBO unification clash with Joseph Parker at the Principality Stadium in Cardiff on March 31.

If Whyte defeats Browne, he would be in line for a showdown with WBC heavyweight champion Deontay Wilder, who himself is preparing for a voluntary defense against Luis Ortiz on March 3rd at Barclays Center in Brooklyn.

But if a better deal comes up for Joshua rematch, Whyte would be willing to skip out on Wilder.

Whyte admits that his rivalry with Joshua runs deep and he would be willing to fight him over and over again. In the build to their 2015 meeting, there were very heated media events and there were fears the two boxers would come to blows before they ever stepped in the ring. 

"Wilder or Joshua, whoever ends up making sense," Whyte said exclusively told Sky Sports.

"Ideally we would like to fight Wilder next. Win that and go into the Joshua fight as the champion. But if AJ is sensible about a good deal, we could get it on next. He knows whenever me and him are in the ring, it's going to be war. I expect to fight him probably another three or four times in my career. It's one of those fights that, if I fight him next and beat him, I'll still fight him again.

"It's a good fight and there is so much emotion and anger and rage in that fight."