Zhilei Zhang has an immense amount of respect for Joseph Parker.

Most heavyweights wouldn’t have welcomed a dangerous showdown with the powerful fighter who brutally knocked out the only opponent to beat him inside the distance. That’s exactly the scenario Parker embraced after he revitalized his career by upsetting Deontay Wilder on December 23 at Kingdom Arena in Riyadh, Saudi Arabia.

Less than 10 weeks later, on March 8 at Kingdom Arena, Parker will encounter Zhang, the gigantic Chinese southpaw whose right hook knocked out Joe Joyce late in the third round of their immediate rematch September 23 at OVO Arena Wembley in London. The 40-year-old Zhang’s impressive, vicious knockout of Joyce occurred one day short of the one-year anniversary of Joyce’s 11th-round knockout of Parker at AO Arena in Manchester, England.

“I was a little surprised that Parker took the fight with me so fast,” Zhang told BoxingScene.com through his translator. “That says a lot about this guy. He’s a warrior. He doesn’t pick and choose his opponents. I give him a lot of respect.”

New Zealand’s Parker (34-3, 23 KOs) has indeed fought a long list of former champions and contenders over the past 7½ years.

Former IBF/IBO/WBA/WBO champ Anthony Joshua (27-3, 24 KOs), Joyce (15-2, 14 KOs) and Dillian Whyte (29-3, 19 KOs) are the only opponents who’ve beaten Parker. The former WBO champion has defeated Wilder (43-3-1, 42 KOs), a former WBC champ, Andy Ruiz Jr. (35-2, 22 KOs), who upset Joshua 4½ years ago to win the abovementioned titles, Dereck Chisora (34-13, 23 KOs) in both of their fights, two then-undefeated fighters in Junior Fa (20-3, 11 KOs) and Hughie Fury (26-3, 15 KOs) and Carlos Takam (40-8-1, 28 KOs), who had lost just twice before Parker beat him.

Wilder was a 7-1 favorite, yet Zhang, who resides and trains in northern New Jersey, predicted Parker would win their 12-round fight last month. Parker’s upset ruined the Anthony Joshua-Wilder fight that was planned to headline another Saudi-sponsored pay-per-view show March 8.

“Before the fight, I was expecting Parker to go the distance and beat Wilder,” Zhang recalled. “That was my pre-fight prediction and he delivered it. So, I was happy to see that.”

Zhang (26-1-1, 21 KOs) thought Wilder would lose because, though a pulverizing puncher, Wilder had boxed less than one round in the 26 months since his 11th-round knockout loss to Tyson Fury in their third WBC title fight. Parker fought for the fourth time with Wilder in the almost 14 months since Joyce knocked him out.

“The big reason was activity,” Zhang said. “Parker has been fighting. He fought [four] times last year, but when you look at Wilder, he’s been inactive. So, his timing was off and he had ring rust. That’s why I picked Parker. … But also, [Wilder] depends a lot on his right hand. He feels like he can knock everybody out, which is true, but if the opponent capitalizes off of that, then what else do you have?”

Wilder didn’t do much else and failed to land the type of punishing right hand on Parker that knocked out most of his previous opponents. Parker won their 12-round bout by big margins on all three scorecards (120-108, 118-111, 118-110).

Zhang nonetheless anticipates his fight with Parker to be more similar to Joyce-Parker than Wilder-Parker.

The 2008 Olympic silver medalist considers Parker “young, hungry, fast and explosive.” Zhang also believes he will wear down the former WBO champion.

The 6-foot-6, 287-pound Zhang noticed that Parker succumbed to Joyce’s persistent pressure. The WBO interim champion, who has lost only a close unanimous decision to Croatian contender Filip Hrgovic (17-0, 14 KOs), expects that to happen again when he opposes Parker in the co-feature before Joshua faces former UFC heavyweight champ Francis Ngannou (0-1) in the 10-round main event March 8.

“I think it was because Joe Joyce’s constant pressure broke Parker mentally and physically,” said Zhang, who stopped Joyce in the sixth round of their first fight last April 15 at OVO Arena Wembley in London. “And when Parker threw punches, he was not able to rock Joe Joyce with those punches. So, at the end of the day, it was the mental pressure and the physical pressure.

“I’m looking to do that, too, but in a more devastating way. I feel like I will put mental and physical pressure on Parker, but I will do it better than Joe Joyce did.”

Keith Idec is a senior writer/columnist for BoxingScene.com. He can be reached on Twitter @Idecboxing.