WBC heavyweight champion Deontay Wilder has a huge fight coming this weekend against Luis Ortiz, but with the amount he is speaking about fellow champion Anthony Joshua - you wouldn't know it.

Over the course of the month of March, four undefeated behemoths will take to the ring to try and preserve their records.

Wilder has to withstand the heavy hitting Cuban 'King Kong' Ortiz, who he goes toe-to-toe with on March 3 at the Barclays Centre in New York.

The other gripping heavyweight bout takes place on March 31, where 'AJ' will return to the scene of his last defence against Carlos Takam, the Principality Stadium in Wales, to put his WBA, IBF and IBO titles on the line, and he will try to claim the WBO belt of New Zealand's Joseph Parker.

But it's been proven time and time again that the 'Bronze Bomber' cannot help but talk about the Englishman, and despite having a huge fight to focus on, Wilder has criticised Joshua's opinion that Tyson Fury is his biggest threat to his championships once he returns to the ring.

"If the people around Joshua really cared about him and loved him, I think someone should've tapped him on the shoulder and whispered in his ear to tell him he's got it all wrong," Wilder told Sky Sports.

"Everyone knows that Tyson Fury isn't the biggest threat in the heavyweight division. Everyone knows who is the man in the heavyweight division, hands down.

"Everybody knows who has the power to beat anyone at any given time, in the first round or 15 seconds into the 12th round.

"I have that ability to do anything I want. I am the most dangerous man in the division, hands down. There hasn't been anyone I have fought that I haven't knocked out."

Wilder, meanwhile, is insistent that the whole heavyweight division belongs to him and that he will prove it time after time, starting with claiming the scalp of Ortiz in New York.

Ortiz, 38, has knocked out 24 opponents from 28 of his wins, but has stirred up some controversy in recent years after failing a drugs test, which ended up being the reasoning for the cancellation for the original Wilder-Ortiz bout in 2017.

The World Boxing Association banned Ortiz and removed him from their rankings for a year, but the World Boxing Council were more lenient and allowed the super fight to go ahead. Wilder, however, is confident it will end how every other fight of his has ended.

"It's almost 40 fights now and I still do what I do," said Wilder brashly. "It's not just that I knock them out, it's the way I knock them out. It's how I knock them out, it's what they do after I knock them out - that's what makes me unique. That's what makes me the most dangerous guy.

"So if he [Joshua] says that, and he needs to keep that in his mind to feel confident because we know this fight will happen. If that gives him the confidence he needs to try and beat me, he is entitled to his own opinion.

"But I think the fact remains: I am the most dangerous man in the heavyweight division. I can't wait to prove it. I need the opportunity to show it to these guys and if I do, it's on."