Trainer Angel Fernandez is one of the new additions to the team of IBF, IBO, WBA, WBO heavyweight champion Anthony Joshua.

Joshua brought in Fernandez in the aftermath of June's seven round TKO defeat at the hands of Andy Ruiz.

The British star reclaimed his titles earlier this month, when he outboxed Ruiz over twelve rounds for a lopsided decision.

Currently the biggest fight for Joshua is a unification with WBC beltholder Deontay Wilder.

Wilder is scheduled to face Tyson Fury in a rematch on February 22. Joshua has two mandatory obligations to deal with.

Fernandez was not overly impressed with Wilder's one-punch knockout of Cuba's Luis Ortiz last month. He believes a younger version of the 40-year-old Ortiz would have won.

“It's a difficult one. But the thing is, you have to take the strengths from Wilder away,” Fernandez told Starsport .

“The mistakes are going to be there, so you have to expose that, but you also have to take the strengths away. I’m not going to tell you a way of how I would fight Wilder or how I would not fight Wilder, it's kind of like break him down with the analysis he's done with the team, bring in sparring partners, and then it's like a process.

“As you see the sparring going, you do some adjustments here, some adjustments there. You rewatch the fight again. It's a process. That's how it's been done with Ruiz this time. As a camp, sparring partners, things were changing. 'I want you to do this' or 'I want you to do that'.

“And with Wilder, we know how dangerous he is with his right hand. With [Luis] Ortiz, Ortiz should really beat him, but I think his age plays a big part in it. I think if Ortiz had been 28 years old, I think he would have beat Wilder.

“Wilder, boxing wise I don't think he's got the ring IQ or the intelligence in the ring, but he has just got that one hand. Fury found that out. He outboxed him for 12 rounds and at that last moment... the man only needs one hand. It will be an interesting one and if I'm part of it, oh my god, I will take it with both hands. It's great for the sport. Don't get me wrong, it's great for the sport. And that is something that drives Josh as well to achieve and become undisputed. Every single boxer would want to do that, especially in the heavyweight division.”