By Edward Chaykovsky

Fireworks will be expected when domestic heavyweight rivals Dereck Chisora and Dillian Whyte are going to collide in the ring on Saturday night in Manchester. The fight will be part of the Anthony Joshua vs. Eric Molina Sky Box Offcice undercard.

Whyte (19-1, 15KOs) has racked up three wins since returning to action. In his last fight, in October, he stopped former sparring partner Ian Lewison to capture the British crown in Glasgow.

Whyte put himself on the map when he gave current IBF heavyweight champion Anthony Joshua his stiffest test last December. Whyte was able to rock Joshua in the second round and made it a real fight until he was knocked out in the seventh. He suffered a shoulder injury during the contest which required surgery.

Back in September, Chisora (26-6, 18KOs) bounced back from his twelve round split decision loss to Kubrat Pulev. He got a knockout win over Drazan Janjanin in Stockholm.

Whyte is salivating at the thought of being able to knock Chisora out.

"I'm going to win. I'm going to try and knock him out, I want to knock him out, but if I'm going to pick up a points decision or a late stoppage then I don't care. I definitely want to put him away though. I want to finish off the year with a big bang," Whyte told Sky Sports.

Chisora is also predicting a knockout - and he's unsure if Whyte will be able to rebuild his career.

"The fight is going to end with me victorious and him on the canvas," Chisora said. "I don't know if he can build himself back up [after I beat him], because it takes character to come back from a defeat. I've lost six times and I've kept on coming back."

Whyte has the same exact thoughts about Chisora. If he's able to stop get an early stoppage, Whyte believes Chisora will consider the idea of retirement. If he loses on points or gets battered in the late rounds, Whyte expects Chisora to carry on - as a domestic journeyman.

"If he gets knocked out in one or two rounds, which is possible, then he will have to think about his career. If it's a good fight and it goes to points or he's stopped late then he can carry on. He can mount a comeback or become a European-level journeyman," Whyte said.