The
38-year-old Klitschko has held at least the IBF and IBO
heavyweight
titles since 2006, adding the WBO title in 2008 by beating Sultan
Ibragimov, before a unanimous decision against Britain's David Haye in
2011 gave him the WBA crown.It says as much for Klitschko's longevity as the lack of genuine contenders that the giant Ukrainian has had few peers in the division.
Klitschko takes on Pulev in his home town Hamburg's O2 World, near the Imtech Arena where he beat Haye more than three years ago.
The Bulgarian has earned his first world title fight by becoming the IBF's mandatory challenger.
The
33-year-old has 11 knock-outs in 20 victories on his unblemished
record, but sparked animosity when he boycotted Monday's pre-fight press
conference having been left fuming after members of his promotional
team were denied access.
"Because Klitschko is not
behaving correctly, he doesn't get my respect," said Pulev. "He isn't
afraid and he will be tested (during the bout)."
The
Ukrainian champion pulled out of the original fight in September due to
a bicep injury and was unimpressed by the challenger's pre-fight
behaviour.
"I cannot believe
it. He is ill-advised and it looks like brainwashing," said a bemused
Klitschko, who has an impressive record of 52 knock-outs in 62 wins with
the last of his three defeats now over a decade ago.
"Somebody from his entourage is pulling his strings."
Pulev
enjoyed knockout wins over Alexander Ustinov and Alexander Dimitrenko
in 2012 and his unanimous win over Tony Thompson in August 2013 earned
him the right to fight Klitschko.
He kept busy last year by
forcing both Joey Abell of the USA and Croatia's Ivica Perkovic into
retiring in the early rounds of their bouts.
"I
am going to be dangerous, pressing the action early on Saturday.
Wladimir will have to move a lot inside the ring," said Pulev.
"This is going to be the most important fight of my career to date."
But Klitschko has seen it all before.
The
champion brushed off the latest extreme efforts by USA boxer Shannon
Briggs on Wednesday to earn a shot at the Ukrainian's belts.
Briggs, 42, gate-crashed
Klitschko's opening training session in Hamburg before being ejected
from the building by security guards.
"The
people don't want Klitschko anymore. I'm the real champ. The world
wants to see the Klitschko-Briggs fight," bellowed the American.
He
also disrupted the press conference before Klitschko's last fight
against Australia's Alex Leapai in April, then a scuffle broke out when
Briggs approached Klitschko while he was eating in an Italian restaurant
in Miami.
He even taunted
Klitschko, the WBO, IBF, IBO and WBA champion, from a speedboat while
the Ukrainian was stand-up paddle surfing in Florida.
"I
really couldn't care less what he does," said Klitschko, 38, after
Briggs' latest stunt. "I will just concentrate on the fight."
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