Trump hosts UFC card at White House; Gaethje defeats Topuria

Digital Desk

Trump hosts UFC card at White House; Gaethje defeats Topuria

President Trump hosted a seven-fight UFC card on the White House South Lawn; Justin Gaethje beat Ilia Topuria by TKO in the fourth round.

 

U.S. President Donald Trump hosted a seven-fight UFC card on the South Lawn of the White House on Sunday night, a spectacle that combined the president’s 80th birthday celebrations with the nation’s 250th anniversary events. The headline bout ended with Justin Gaethje defeating lightweight champion Ilia Topuria by TKO in the fourth round.

Event on the South Lawn

The South Lawn was transformed into a 4,300-seat arena beneath a 92-foot translucent canopy nicknamed “the Claw,” with an eight-sided Octagon installed directly in front of the executive mansion. Organisers ran the show under the Ultimate Fighting Championship banner; CEO Dana White — a close associate of the president — led fight-night proceedings alongside White House hosts.

Gaethje scores TKO

The main event, billed as a high-stakes lightweight clash, went into the fourth round before Justin Gaethje forced a stoppage. According to initial reports and footage from the Octagon, Gaethje landed a sequence of heavy strikes that left champion Ilia Topuria unable to continue. After the referee halted the contest, President Trump and members of his family entered the cage to congratulate the winner, who raised his arms as fireworks exploded over the National Mall.

Other key results

Earlier on the card, Ciryl Gane defeated Alex Pereira by TKO to claim the interim heavyweight crown. Bantamweight Sean O’Malley and several other fighters also recorded stoppages or decisive wins, and multiple post-fight moments — including fighters greeting VIPs cage-side — punctuated the evening. The programme ran seven fights in total.

Security and guest list

Security officials said a heavy deployment of federal and local forces protected the event. Metropolitan Police, the Secret Service, National Guard units and other agencies were reported at perimeter checkpoints and crowd-control posts. A string of corporate and tech executives were among the invited guests; Meta CEO Mark Zuckerberg was visible in the crowd, and former boxer Tyson Fury made a brief appearance. Several Cabinet members and administration officials also attended, according to White House briefings.

Cost and logistics

Reports from outlets including The New York Times put the event’s cost — covering staging, security and related expenses for the UFC and its affiliates — above the level of a typical card, with estimates reaching into the tens of millions of dollars. Organisers erected hospitality spaces and opened several formal rooms inside the White House to fighters and guests for pre-fight access, including the Grand Foyer and Green Room, NBC and other outlets reported.

Questions over protocol

The event drew scrutiny on multiple fronts. Observers noted instances of flag-inspired costumes, which some said could conflict with U.S. Flag Code guidance that discourages using the flag as apparel. There were also fleeting controversies during the night: one fighter made a disparaging comment about former first lady Michelle Obama during a post-fight speech, and cameras caught the president briefly smiling at the remark. Separately, reports said several fighters might receive part of their bonus pay in a cryptocurrency tied to family-promoted ventures, a detail that raised questions about transparency and sponsorship.

Ground-level scene

On the South Lawn, fans chanted “Happy Birthday” to the president after the third fight, and several winners climbed out of the Octagon to greet the presidential box. Ground-level accounts described a charged, festival-like atmosphere late into the evening, with music, pyrotechnics and fans moving between the fan-fest area and the arena seats.

What’s next

The White House said the event was part of broader 250th anniversary programming and birthday events for the president. Officials did not immediately announce plans for similar sporting events on federal property. Media organisations and congressional offices are expected to seek further details on the full cost breakdown and the administrative approvals that allowed a professional mixed-martial-arts promotion to stage a pay-per-view-style card on White House grounds.

 

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english.dainikjagranmpcg.com
15 Jun 2026 By Abhishek Joshi

Trump hosts UFC card at White House; Gaethje defeats Topuria

Digital Desk

U.S. President Donald Trump hosted a seven-fight UFC card on the South Lawn of the White House on Sunday night, a spectacle that combined the president’s 80th birthday celebrations with the nation’s 250th anniversary events. The headline bout ended with Justin Gaethje defeating lightweight champion Ilia Topuria by TKO in the fourth round.

Event on the South Lawn

The South Lawn was transformed into a 4,300-seat arena beneath a 92-foot translucent canopy nicknamed “the Claw,” with an eight-sided Octagon installed directly in front of the executive mansion. Organisers ran the show under the Ultimate Fighting Championship banner; CEO Dana White — a close associate of the president — led fight-night proceedings alongside White House hosts.

Gaethje scores TKO

The main event, billed as a high-stakes lightweight clash, went into the fourth round before Justin Gaethje forced a stoppage. According to initial reports and footage from the Octagon, Gaethje landed a sequence of heavy strikes that left champion Ilia Topuria unable to continue. After the referee halted the contest, President Trump and members of his family entered the cage to congratulate the winner, who raised his arms as fireworks exploded over the National Mall.

Other key results

Earlier on the card, Ciryl Gane defeated Alex Pereira by TKO to claim the interim heavyweight crown. Bantamweight Sean O’Malley and several other fighters also recorded stoppages or decisive wins, and multiple post-fight moments — including fighters greeting VIPs cage-side — punctuated the evening. The programme ran seven fights in total.

Security and guest list

Security officials said a heavy deployment of federal and local forces protected the event. Metropolitan Police, the Secret Service, National Guard units and other agencies were reported at perimeter checkpoints and crowd-control posts. A string of corporate and tech executives were among the invited guests; Meta CEO Mark Zuckerberg was visible in the crowd, and former boxer Tyson Fury made a brief appearance. Several Cabinet members and administration officials also attended, according to White House briefings.

Cost and logistics

Reports from outlets including The New York Times put the event’s cost — covering staging, security and related expenses for the UFC and its affiliates — above the level of a typical card, with estimates reaching into the tens of millions of dollars. Organisers erected hospitality spaces and opened several formal rooms inside the White House to fighters and guests for pre-fight access, including the Grand Foyer and Green Room, NBC and other outlets reported.

Questions over protocol

The event drew scrutiny on multiple fronts. Observers noted instances of flag-inspired costumes, which some said could conflict with U.S. Flag Code guidance that discourages using the flag as apparel. There were also fleeting controversies during the night: one fighter made a disparaging comment about former first lady Michelle Obama during a post-fight speech, and cameras caught the president briefly smiling at the remark. Separately, reports said several fighters might receive part of their bonus pay in a cryptocurrency tied to family-promoted ventures, a detail that raised questions about transparency and sponsorship.

Ground-level scene

On the South Lawn, fans chanted “Happy Birthday” to the president after the third fight, and several winners climbed out of the Octagon to greet the presidential box. Ground-level accounts described a charged, festival-like atmosphere late into the evening, with music, pyrotechnics and fans moving between the fan-fest area and the arena seats.

What’s next

The White House said the event was part of broader 250th anniversary programming and birthday events for the president. Officials did not immediately announce plans for similar sporting events on federal property. Media organisations and congressional offices are expected to seek further details on the full cost breakdown and the administrative approvals that allowed a professional mixed-martial-arts promotion to stage a pay-per-view-style card on White House grounds.

 

https://english.dainikjagranmpcg.com/special-news/trump-hosts-ufc-card-at-white-house-gaethje-defeats-topuria/article-20162

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