The offers from heavyweights wanting to relieve Joseph Parker of his WBO world title are pouring in, including one from Australian Lucas Browne which the Kiwi boxer's promoter David Higgins is seriously looking at.
Higgins, who arrived back in Auckland this morning after a short break with family in Ireland following Parker's majority decision victory over Hughie Fury in Manchester, is keen on a fight against the undefeated Browne, who has called out Parker for years.
It would be one of the biggest trans-Tasman fights in history and could be held either in Auckland, Melbourne or Sydney - and probably in the New Year. A fight between 25-year-old Parker and the 38-year-old Browne, who had the WBA world "super" title taken from his grasp after he failed a drugs test in Grozny, Russia, last year, would probably be a relatively easy one for Higgins to promote.
Browne, nicknamed Big Daddy, has the appearance of a nightclub bouncer but fights with more finesse than that, and he performed admirably to stop Ruslan Chagaev in his title fight last year before returning a positive test which he has strenuously disputed. Browne has had one fight since - a knockout victory over American journeyman Matthew Greer in Sydney in June.
Parker's win over mandatory challenger Fury gives him the right to choose an opponent for a voluntary defence of his world title, and it will be an opponent chosen carefully for his style as well as the money the fight would generate.