WBC heavyweight champion Deontay Wilder (41-0-1, 40 KOs) is promising to make good on a string of knockouts in his upcoming two fights.
Wilder is going to repeat his schedule of 2018 - where he knocked out Luis Ortiz in the tenth round and then went on to fight Tyson Fury to a controversial twelve round split draw.
Wilder is slated to face Ortiz in a rematch on a date in November. And should he win, he will then face Fury in a rematch in February.
At the moment there is still no date for the fight with Ortiz.
And, Fury still has to overcome undefeated Otto Wallin next month at the T-Mobile Arena in Las Vegas.
Wilder wants to eventually face his Premier Boxing Champions stablemate - IBF, WBO, WBA, IBO world champion Andy Ruiz, who on December 7th will face Anthony Joshua in a rematch in Saudi Arabia.
"Ortiz is definitely happening," Wilder told BBC Sport. "I am looking forward to fighting him. After I knock him out I will go to Fury, knock him out and then we will go for a unification.
"Once I get rid of Ortiz, I will get rid of Fury too. We will figure it out but Ortiz comes first."
As far as the Ruiz vs. Joshua rematch, Wilder is picking the Mexican heavyweight to once again come out on top.
"I saw Ruiz punch Joshua in the temple and it knocked his equilibrium out. He could not recover and that meant he got knocked down four times. When you are in a situation where you have not been before, it is like life teaching you a lot of lessons on the job," Wilder said.
"At that moment on the job for Joshua, he had to learn and could not pull through. But having fallen this time in life, the next time he might pull through because he has experienced it before and he should be able to correct the wrongs. Ruiz in my opinion [will win again]. I feel Joshua does not know how he lost, and that means he will not know how to set up a proper training camp - but anything is possible."