There aren’t many physical advantages Ryan Garcia’s trainer doesn’t see him having over Gervonta Davis.

Joe Goossen offered a considerable list of attributes he feels Garcia will be able to utilize versus Davis in their 12-round, 136-pound showdown Saturday night when he was interviewed during a recent appearance on “The PBC Podcast.” Goossen told co-hosts Kenneth Bouhairie and Michael Rosenthal that he has “the better racehorse” entering a bout Baltimore’s Davis is favored by oddsmakers to win by more than a 2-1 margin.

“I think he’s got the reach,” Goossen said of the 5-foot-10 Garcia. “I think he’s got the height and the speed. But more importantly, he’s got power like nobody I’ve ever seen. And I can tell you, I’ve trained a lotta great punchers. He is incredible. He is so heavy-handed, and it comes so fast that you don’t – look, nobody wants to get hit with anybody’s best punch, especially if they’re knockout punchers. But I’m gonna tell you, I like the physical advantage of the height and reach we’ve got. OK?”

Davis’ vaunted speed and power have helped the WBA secondary lightweight champ knock out 93 percent of his professional opponents, but Goossen senses he’ll meet his match in their Showtime Pay-Per-View main event at T-Mobile Arena in Las Vegas. The 24-year-old Garcia’s power has particularly impressed Goossen since he began training the Victorville, California native prior to his 12-round, unanimous-decision defeat of Ghana’s Emmanuel Tagoe (32-2, 15 KOs) in April 2022 at Alamodome in San Antonio.

“Ryan’s speed is, you know, I mean, you’ve gotta slow the film down when you wanna see some of his short, left hooks,” Goossen said. “I mean, they’re just almost imperceptible, you know, [to the] naked eye, unless you slow it down. But Ryan has the height, reach, I think he’s the bigger man, which is important, and I think he's got unbelievable speed. As quick as Tank is, and he’s quick and accurate, I just think we’ve got the edge on the quick-twitch muscles there.

“I think Ryan’s got a little edge there, but again, power like I’ve never – what he does to sparring partners is just something I’ve never seen, really. And I’ve had some great fighters. I mean, I’ve had sparring partners that dominate sparring sessions round after round. But Ryan doesn’t only dominate, he punishes I mean really good fighters. And they come out of the ring going, ‘Man, I never knew that you hit this hard.’ ”

The 28-year-old Davis demanded a catch weight of 136 pounds and a rehydration clause in their contracts during negotiations due to Garcia’s size advantage.

Neither Garcia (23-0, 19 KOs) nor Davis (28-0, 26 KOs), who stands three-plus inches shorter than Garcia, can weigh more than 146 pounds at a second-day weigh-in Saturday morning. Both boxers can gain as much weight as they want from when they weigh in a second time until they enter the ring for the main event of Showtime’s four-fight telecast (8 p.m. EDT; 5 p.m. PDT; $84.99).

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