ANTHONY Mundine will fly to Brisbane next week to meet with Jeff Horn’s team with an eye to organising their superfight at Suncorp Stadium in November.

Horn’s trainer Glenn Rushton said he was all for the fight and believed it had the potential to top the 2006 Mundine-Danny Green bout as the biggest pay per view event in Australian history with revenue topping $10 million.

Rushton said Mundine was the perfect “comeback’’ fight for Horn following his loss to American Terence Crawford in last week’s world welterweight title fight in Las Vegas.

“This has the potential to be a great, historic fight,’’ Rushton said.

“Usually when a world champion loses their title they come back against mediocre opposition to rebuild their confidence. In Anthony Mundine, Jeff would be facing one of the best known athletes in Australia and a former world champ who still has blazing hand speed and a big punch.

“I think it will be a fight that all of Australia will be interested in seeing.’’

Rushton hopes a win over Mundine will be the springboard to a return fight with Manny Pacquiao at Suncorp in 2019 and a potential rematch with Crawford at the same venue later that year.

“We know Crawford is agreeable to fighting Jeff again so long as the money is there and I know that Jeff certainly has the potential to win a return fight. We just need to get him a couple of more big wins. That loss will only make him stronger.’’

Sydney-based Mundine will be accompanied to Brisbane by his highly-respected adviser Emaid Dib, whose brother Billy Dib is a former world featherweight champion fighting for the super-featherweight title in Sydney on August 3.

A Mundine-Horn fight has been brewing ever since 2013 when The Courier-Mail published an Annette Dew photo of Horn punching “The Man’’ flush in the face during a sparring session at Kangaroo Point.

While Horn’s promoter Dean Lonergan did his best to hose down talk of a Horn-Mundine fight in the aftermath of the loss to Crawford, Rushton and Horn are keen to pursue the bout because of the money and media interest it could generate.

Mundine has promised to turn over a new leaf in promoting the fight, after years of playing the villain.

“I went with the controversies in the past because I thought that’s what everyone expected,’’ Mundine said.

“Sometimes I was forced to play a role that wasn’t really me just to create headlines. I said a lot of things in the past that were probably stupid and dumb and I was advised badly a lot of the time to do that to sell tickets. I’m coming to the twilight of my career now and I want people to remember me as a role model and a sportsman, someone who never drank, never did drugs and who trained hard and always gave it his best.

“People who really know me, know that I’m a very different person to the public perception.’’

Mundine said even at 43 he still had the speed and the skills to counter Horn’s strength, youth and aggression.

“Jeff is a great guy and I’ve got no animosity towards him, but I want to challenge myself in a big fight and Jeff is the biggest challenge out there. Crawford was just too slick but he is one of the world’s best pound for pound. Jeff is still a very highly regarded fighter despite the loss.’’

Horn, 30, who is holidaying in Canada with his wife, mother and his wife’s parents, has wanted to beat Mundine ever since he had his first amateur fight at Acacia Ridge in 2008.

“When I was coming along through the amateur ranks Anthony Mundine was the big star of Australian boxing,’’ Horn said.

“The first fight I ever saw was him beating Danny Green. It would be kind of cool to beat the guy who was the big star when I started - sort of a changing of the guard.’’