Former cruiserweight champion Tony Bellew gives full credit to Deontay Wilder for his feared punching power - but he also feels the dangerous boxer is very unorganized inside the ring.

Back in February of 2020, Wilder suffered his first career defeat when he was stopped in seven rounds by Tyson Fury.

The two boxers will collide for a third time, for the WBC heavyweight title, on July 24th at the T-Mobile Arena in Las Vegas.

Bellew saw numerous flaws from Wilder in the first and second encounter, with the way he was throwing his punches and setting up much bigger shots.

Wilder has since made changes to his corner and brought on former foe Malik Scott as head trainer.

However, Bellew does not expect a different outcome when Wilder faces Fury for a third time.

“There’s telegraphing punches and then there’s skimming the lights above the ring – that’s what Deontay Wilder was doing. His punches were that wild and that crude. He was out of control. He may have crazy power and he might be the biggest punching heavyweight since Mike Tyson, but he has no class and he has no skillset to match that power," Bellew told Talk Sport.

“So it’s like a bull in a china shop. He doesn’t know what he’s doing. He can’t set his attacks up, his jab was just useless in the fight, he didn’t know what to do. Even when he had Tyson Fury down and out [in the first fight] he couldn’t finish him.

“Think about this, if Tyson Fury gets dropped by Anthony Joshua, do you genuinely believe he’s going to be able to see out the round? Anthony Joshua is one of the best finishers.... right now he’s the best finisher in the heavyweight division.”