Tony Bellew shocked the world when he managed to defeat David Haye last month, even if the latter had one leg for six rounds.

The huge Everton fan is still the WBC cruiserweight champion, but after defeating the Hayemaker at heavyweight, the question is: Will he continue in the heaviest division?

According to his trainer, Dave Coldwell, that's a possibility, but picking his opponent comes with some strict criteria.

“Forget [Anthony] Joshua that’s not even a name that’s come into the equation,” Coldwell told Boxing News. “He’s just absolutely massive, he’s a completely different animal."

Apparently, the same can be said for Tyson Fury, even if he is currently out of shape.

“Way too big, not just too big but too big and too tricky. He knows his way around a boxing ring and he knows how to use his size,” Coldwell said. “It’s not about the body, it’s what you can do with that body and Fury, he knows how to get the best out of his body in a fight in the boxing ring. His sheer size and his long arms and his long legs, no.”

However, he did offer two names that Bellew might consider.

“If Joseph Parker beats Hughie Fury, which is by no means a given, but if Parker were to beat Fury then Parker’s six foot four, he’s about 17st but he’s not the finished article he’s not an absolute killer. He’s a decent fighter that’s coming through, I know he’s got a version of the title but he’s still a fighter that’s a work in progress,” Coldwell said.

“Wilder for me technically looks very, very poor at times but he’s just very long, very, very big puncher and that’s the thing. Again he’s a giant.”

It doesn't sound like Bellew wants to fight anyone of those guys, really. A rematch with David Haye - pending a full recovery from his Achilles tendon tear - seems like the only viable option on the table, and, of course, there would be huge money in that rematch.

Haye is a former cruiserweight himself, so his build is more suited to Bellew, who it appears has no interest in mixing it up with the giants at 34-years-old.