There's now less than a week to go until Tyson Fury makes his long-awaited comeback.

The Gypsy King has spent two-and-a-half years out of boxing after having his license withdrawn, but that hiatus will come to an end when he steps into the ring with Sefer Seferi on June 9th.

Having said that, the 29-year-old, whose record stands at 25-0, has never *really* gone away.

Fury's personality is sufficiently intriguing to keep him in the spotlight even when he has been unable to fight.

The former heavyweight champion has never shied away from giving his thoughts on the rest of the division, calling Anthony Joshua a "bum" and eyeing a bout with his fellow Brit in the future.

What is more, he has never put to bed the bad blood that still runs between him and the Klitschko's.

Wladimir was the last man to face Fury in November 2015 and the fight signalled the end of the Ukranian's 10-year period of domination.

This week, the brothers called Fury the champion of "trash-talking," which he didn't take kindly to.

And he has now gone into further detail by explaining exactly what Wladimir Klitschko got wrong in both his fights against Joshua and against Fury himself.

What went wrong for Klitschko 

“Big Wlad goes to bed dreaming of being the Gypsy King," he said, per the Star.

“He even tried copying my boxing style against AJ, but it didn’t work, because you gotta be a gangster and have the confidence to pull it off.

“It’s a sad story, you got your a*** kicked and played with."

Looking back at their own contest, he added:

“It was the easiest fight of my life.

“He had no power and no strength, he couldn’t land any punches and it will haunt him forever that someone like me beat someone like him.

“Where does that leave him? It leaves him a beaten man who had to cry himself to sleep just to get used to the fact he lost to me.”

Probably not the case, let's be honest Tyson.

What boxing fans really want to know is whether Fury is still able to back up all his big chat.

His suspension came at the worst possible time career-wise and while he is expected to beat Seferi comfortably - or why else would his promoters have set the fight up? - it will be very interesting to see how he would fare against someone of AJ's calibre.

Would Fury beat AJ? Have your say in the comments.