Deontay Wilder would not have landed his trademark knockout punch had negotiations resulted in a fight, says ‘Prince’ Charles Martin.
The American heavyweights were twice in talks to meet inside the ring in 2020, until Wilder won an arbitration case leading to his trilogy clash against Tyson Fury.
Martin will instead make his comeback against Luis Ortiz on January 1 in an IBF eliminator which will have ramifications for the world title picture.
“It would have been a great opportunity,” Martin told Sky Sports about facing Wilder, in what would have been a clash between former world heavyweight champions.
“I always knew there was a possibility that things wouldn’t go in my favour, but I had still prepared myself mentally.
“I was able to treat it like a championship fight. I gave 100 per cent effort even knowing there was a possibility it could fall through.”
Ex-IBF titleholder Martin said about Wilder: “He lacks in a lot of areas.
“I am pretty difficult to hit. You can’t hit me flush because I never just come in [straight].
“I am always strategic.”
Martin was more recently in talks to fight Andy Ruiz Jr, another former world heavyweight champion.
But the potential bout fell apart when Ruiz Jr, the first man to beat Anthony Joshua, needed knee surgery.
“I shot him a personal DM,” Martin said about Ruiz Jr. “He left it unread.
“We were training for it. The next thing? He had a surgery.
“Now I pray for no crazy calls saying that Ortiz is injured.
“Andy knew I would have whupped his ass. That’s why he didn’t answer me.
“Because he knew that he didn’t want to fight me.”
Martin’s most recent fight was his most impressive performance ever – a one-punch knockout of former world title challenger Gerald Washington.
Sky Sports Boxing schedule
Saturday January 29 – BOXXER in Cardiff
Chris Eubank Jr vs Liam Williams
Claressa Shields vs Ema Kozin – IBF, WBA and WBC middleweight titles
Saturday February 19 – BOXXER in Manchester – Sky Sports Box Office
Amir Khan vs Kell Brook
Saturday February 26 – BOXXER and Top Rank in Glasgow
Josh Taylor vs Jack Catterall – undisputed super-lightweight titles