Tyson Fury believes it is time to end Wladimir Klitschko's domination ahead of Saturday's world heavyweight title clash between the duo at the Esprit Arena in Dusseldorf.
The 27-year-old undefeated Mancunian faces the Ukrainian - 12 years his senior, who has dominated his division for more than a decade and currently holds the WBA, IBF, IBO and WBO belts - as the two go head-to-head in Germany.
But Fury told a press conference shown on Sky Sports News: "Old guy, young guy, old champion, new champion - enough said."
Fury admitted he would not let his nerves get the better of him despite being overwhelmed as soon as his plane touched down in Germany.
He added: "It all crashes down to me as soon as I land into the town and I see the big posters everywhere and I actually feel like I'm involved in a fight now and I'm really nervous.
"I never felt this way before - ever.
"I ate, slept, drank plenty of water and ate my vitamins so I should be feeling good come fight night"
"I feel really anxious and really nervous for this fight and all these people and cameras are actually making me shy and I'm forgetting what to say.
"I'm actually shaking right now and I hope this is giving Wlad some confidence - not really, there we have it."
With a record of 24 wins from 24 fights and 18 of them knockouts, Fury takes his big-match confidence into the ring with him this weekend and confirmed he had trained well ahead of the fight.
He said: "I was injury free the whole (training) camp which was quite cool this time and we didn't leave anything unturned that we shouldn't have done.
"I ate, slept, drank plenty of water and ate my vitamins so I should be feeling good come fight night."
And Fury had a final message for Saturday night's opponent, adding: "I hope Wlad's trained really hard but I don't want to go on too much because I don't want to scare him off again like last time.
"As we know, if I say a lot of stuff in the press conferences then we usually don't have any fights. So I'm going to wind it back in and just wait for the fight night.
"I didn't believe this fight was going to happen for a long, long time. And he's proved me wrong. This fight is actually going to happen.
"Like I said, I'm coming and I'm coming really fast for you Wlad."
The ever-cool Klitschko admitted he himself has to overcome the nerves that come with the sport before each fight and that he was looking forward to coming up against a "colourful" character in Fury.
The 39-year-old, who boasts 64 wins from 67 fights (53 knockouts) during his career, said: "There have been many fighters along the years that I have faced, that were different and this time I have a very colourful guy that is young and wants to have the real challenge.
"And of course, I heard what he said that he's nervous. Which means he's well prepared and alert - because it's good to be nervous. I'm nervous before every fight. I have to confront it, this is a fact.
"I've been nervous before every fight and I always faced some challenges that I never thought [of] in the training camp that I would be able to face in the ring later on."
Klitschko believes the bout will sell out in Dusseldorf on what he anticipates to be a great night.
He added: "I'm really happy that this fight is taking place on Saturday night - we're going to see each other a couple of times before the work out, the weigh-in and eventually the fight.
"I just want to say 'thank you' to all the fans out there that are following this fight and I'm sure it is going to be a sold-out stadium and it's going to be a great atmosphere and a great night."
Klitschko signed off, thanking the media and shaking Fury's hand as he said: "Thank you everybody and [looked to Fury], of course good luck in the fight."