IBF, IBO, WBA, WBO heavyweight champion Anthony Joshua would love to have a showdown with WBC champion Tyson Fury fight at Wembley Stadium.

The chances of that actually happening at the moment is unlikely - after the British Boxing Board of Control shut down all boxing events in the month of January - after cases of COVID-19 began to explode.

"I would welcome Tyson Fury to [fight at Wembley]. I would welcome him to that all day," Joshua told Sky Sports News.

"It's brilliant for the kids of the local areas to come down. It's like half an hour drive, a couple of hours' drive for some of them. It's a brilliant opportunity to have it here as well, but the government have got to do right by the people and protect us from this virus. I understand the situation that the country is in.

"I think the possibilities of it being in this country are down to the pandemic, and how that shapes up. I feel, for me, I'm not too fussed where it is. I just want to get the fight, because there's so much variables, and so much for me to look at. Where is it going to be? Is he going to take the fight? Have I got a mandatory? I've just stripped it all back now and stopped dealing with that stuff. I've just said, 'Let me just fight Tyson Fury wherever it is, whatever time it is.'"

As to when the first fight could happen? Joshua figures in the month of June.

And at this point Joshua doesn't care where it happens - he just wants Fury.

"I think maybe June, end of June," said Joshua.

"It needs a bit of time, because the pandemic is unpredictable at the minute. We don't know what's happening, but with a little more time, it gives us more time to prepare and plan. Right now, I said to the team, let's get ahead of the curve, let's start putting things in place now. They are doing a great job.

"I promise you, conversations and face-to-face meetings are happening with representations of my team and Tyson Fury's team."