Tyson Fury is well and truly on the comeback trail following the British Boxing Board of Control's (BBBofC) decision to lift the suspension placed on him for drug offences dating back over a two year period.

It has been a tough couple of years for the former IBF, WBA and WBO world title-holder, who in 2015 became the first man to defeat Ukrainian Wladimir Klitschko in over 11 years.

Despite being stripped of The Ring title - an award given by American publication 'The Ring' to a rightful champion - yesterday a title he's held since the aforementioned Klitschko win - Fury is wholly focused on his comeback fight.

In order to get into the best possible shape, he made the bold decision to change his trainer from uncle Peter Fury to Ben Davison, someone who previously pursued professional football at Stevenage but was coaxed back into boxing training by Billy Joe Saunders.

"I've had much more emotional pleasure from training," he said. "I've found my niche."

It was Saunders who managed to introduce Davison to Tyson Fury and since then the two have worked closely together to get him back on track.

"We were on the same wavelength and I gave him a few ideas he hadn't thought of and he was impressed with that," Davison told Boxing News Online. "Sometimes you can just gel and we have the same understanding."

Davison firmly believes Fury needs to mark his return by taking on opponents at a lower level of before he is thrown into the ring against the likes of Anthony Joshua.

He continued: "I'd like him to have three or four warm-up fights this year, get him active."

More surprisingly, Davison went on to say Joshua, who is due to fight Joseph Parker in a unification bout in March, is not actually Fury's biggest threat.

Instead, when asked to name the Gypsy King's potentially most dangerous opponent, his new trainer thinks American Deontay Wilder could cause his man the most problems.

"I think Deontay Wilder, because with Wilder he fights well under pressure," Davison added.

“If you watch him against [Johann] Duhaupas he doesn’t panic, he’s quite relaxed but he’s also got a very long reach, fast hands, he can box at distance and we know when he hurts you he gets wild.

"But there are certain things that, when people do a certain something to him, he has a bad habit. He’s only boxed one person who’s done that to him and I’m not going to say what that is, but it’s one thing that Tyson will definitely bring to the table.”

So fans won't get the fight they were expecting right away, but it's clear to see that Davison has been key to getting Tyson Fury motivated again with the hope he can get himself back up to the top of heavyweight boxing.