Donald Trump says he'd like to beat up President Joe Biden, and believes that it wouldn't even be a challenge for him.
During a promotional event for a boxing match between two other fighters of advancing years - Evander Holyfield, 58, and Vitor Belfort, 44 - Trump, 75, didn't hold back admitting who he’d like to face in the ring.
"Well if I had to pick somebody in the world, not only a professional boxer because I’ll take a pass on the professional boxers - that can be a very dangerous subject," Trump told the audience via phone, per CNN.
"I think probably my easiest fight would be Joe Biden because I think he'd go down very, very quickly."
Watch Trump make the revelation below:
The former president added that he thought "Biden would go down in the first few seconds."
Per Independent, his comments saw the audience break into laughter followed by applause at the Triller Fight Club event, which was attended by the hosts, the boxers, and reporters.
It's not the first time a fight between the pair has been mentioned.
Watch Biden confess to wanting to fight Trump:
Three years ago, Trump recalled a threatening remark Biden had made about him.
"You know, he once said, 'Oh, I’d like to take him behind the barn,'" the former president recalled, per CNN. "He'd be in big trouble if he ever did."
In 2018, Biden told College Democrats at the University of Miami that with Trump, he'd prefer a fight to a debate.
Watch Trump admit he wants to fight Biden back in 2016:
"When a guy who ended up becoming our national leader said, 'I can grab a woman anywhere and she likes it,'" Biden said at the time, "they asked me, would I like to debate this gentleman, and I said no. I said, 'If we were in high school, I'd take him behind the gym and beat the hell out of him.'"
Biden was referring to the infamous Access Hollywood tape, in which Trump was recorded bragging that he could "grab [women] by the p****" and get away with it because he was "a star".
When the audio recording emerged in late 2016, it nearly derailed Trump's presidential campaign, but the Republican candidate dismissed it as "locker room talk".