Haye looks for Klitschko double

Boxing: David Haye is confident he will fight Vitali Klitschko later this year after he has “smashed” his brother Wladimir on…

Boxing: David Haye is confident he will fight Vitali Klitschko later this year after he has "smashed" his brother Wladimir on Saturday.

Haye has vowed to retire on his 31st birthday in October but wants to bow out as undisputed heavyweight champion by beating Wladimir this weekend and then taking on his older sibling.

Vitali (39) is scheduled to defend his WBC belt against Tomasz Adamek in September but Haye is confident the Ukrainian will find a way to face him instead.

He said: “I’ll start thinking about Vitali after the referee has counted to 10 on Saturday and I’m the new unified champ. We’ll see. I think after the fight things will change pretty quickly, I’m positive about that.”

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Haye insists he will not postpone his retirement.

“There’s nobody else I want to fight,” he added. “Without a doubt I’m confident I’ll fight Vitali in September or October. Once I’ve smashed Wladimir I’m pretty sure his big brother is going to try to step up to the plate to take revenge.”

WBA champion Haye aims to add Wladimir’s IBF and WBO titles to his own belt in Hamburg on Saturday. He does so as a significant underdog with bookmakers and hopes his 35-year-old nemesis is taking him lightly.

“If he’s watched my last fights and is judging me on those then he is underestimating me, without a doubt,” said the Englishman. “For example during my whole campaign at cruiserweight everyone said ‘if you get David past four or five rounds he runs out of steam’.

“Well, that only happened to me once, when I lost to Carl Thompson (in 2004). I wasn’t going to let it happen again. The only time it happened was then and Carl Thompson took his opportunity.

“Everyone else tried that and failed. Every time they got me into the later stages they got knocked out, because I learned from the Thompson fight.”

Haye is critical of Klitschko’s “robotic” style but does insist the long-reigning champion is less vulnerable than his reputation suggests.

He said: “I don’t believe he’s chinny. He wouldn’t have had the success he has had over so many years if he was chinny because he has been hit by big shots.

“How he reacts to them is different to me — does he stand and hold his ground and fight? Not that often. ”But for some reason I saw in his eyes he looked like he is going to come and do something different this time round and if he does, that’s fine by me.“

Klitschko’s legendary trainer Emanuel Steward is enjoying the big-fight atmosphere and the Kronk Gym veteran is expecting fireworks at the Imtech Arena.

“I’m very excited about this fight,” he said. “It’s a big fight. I’ve been involved in super-fights now for 30 years, since the first between Thomas Hearns and Sugar Ray Leonard.

“This is leading up to be the second biggest I’ve been involved in after the Lennox Lewis-Mike Tyson fight (in 2002).

“The thing about this fight that makes it this big is that we have two good-looking fighters, their bodies look good — which is a rarity today in the heavyweight division — and also they are in their prime.

“Lennox was my greatest heavyweight and he beat Mike Tyson who had slipped a little bit. Wladimir and David are fighting when they are both in their prime.

“I’ve just come back from America this weekend and the interest is phenomenal out there. We’re not aware of it because we’re in training camp but at Atlanta airport, everyone is talking about the fight all over the television.

“The magnitude of it is going to make the fighters perform even above their normal level.”

Steward added: “This is the only fight I’ve known Wladimir be emotionally charged up for since the rematch with Chris Byrd, and that was because Byrd’s family said a lot of things.

“For this fight he is very charged up but still he’s been very cool.”