The entire White House card was announced at UFC 326 in March
UFC has set the stage for an unparalleled extravaganza. The mixed martial arts leader will host a fight card from the White House this summer, officially titled "Freedom Fight 250." Fans have been theorizing for months what the historic event would look like, and now we know.
On Saturday, the promotion announced a six-fight card for the summer spectacle. Nearly every major name in the sport has expressed interest in fighting at the White House, but not everyone made the cut. UFC lightweight champion Ilia Topuria will unify titles with interim champion Justin Gaethje in the main event. Alex Pereira seeks a third weight class title, albeit an interim one, when he faces Ciryl Gane in his heavyweight debut. The card also features one more former UFC champion.
Last year, President Trump proposed a UFC event at the White House as part of America's 250th celebration on for the Fourth of July. One month later, UFC president and CEO Dana White confirmed the promotion would indeed produce the unique event.
Take a look below at everything you need to know about the upcoming UFC White House card.
Who is fighting at the White House?
UFC announced six fights that will take place at the event. Most notably, a lightweight unification bout sits atop the card as Ilia Topuria takes on interim titleholder Justin Gaethje. Plus, Alex Pereira moves up to a third weight class in pursuit of more greatness when he takes on Ciryl Gane for the interim heavyweight title.
- Ilia Topuria (c) vs. Justin Gaethje (ic), lightweight championship
- Alex Pereira vs. Ciryl Gane, interim heavyweight championship
- Sean O'Malley vs. Aiemann Zahabi, bantamweights
- Mauricio Ruffy vs. Michael Chandler, lightweights
- Bo Nickal vs. Kyle Daukaus, middleweights
- Diego Lopes vs. Steve Garcia, featherweights
Since the White House sits on federal land, no state athletic commission has jurisdiction over the event. Without a regulatory body, the fight results cannot impact the athletes' professional records. UFC remedied this by inviting the Association of Boxing Commissions to serve as regulatory advisors. All six fights will move forward as officially licensed and sanctioned contests.
"As the event is being held on federal property, there is no requirement for the UFC to select a state athletic commission to oversee the event," Association of Boxing Commissions president Timothy Shipman wrote in a press release. "The UFC expresses its commitment to ensuring that this event is among the most thoroughly regulated in the history of the sport and has requested that the ABC serve as an independent third party to assist in assembling the most qualified group of judges, referees and inspectors in the world.
"The UFC has further confirmed that it will abide by all applicable regulatory requirements in support of this event, including all required medical examinations, pre-bout and post-bout physicals, and athlete safety protocols. All bouts on this card are officially licensed and sanctioned contests."
When will the UFC White House card take place?
The card is tentatively scheduled for June 14, coinciding with President Trump's 80th birthday. The President originally pitched the card for Independence Day before it moved to June. UFC has not confirmed a start time. Currently, main cards for numbered events begin at 9 p.m. ET, while most Fight Nights stateside start at 8 p.m. ET.
What will the event look like?
Fighters will walk from the Oval Office to the Octagon. The Octagon will be erected on the South Lawn. White expects fewer than 5,000 spectators to attend, citing security concerns. In February, Ari Emmanuel, CEO of TKO Group Holdings, UFC's parent company, estimated 3,000 to 4,000 spectators on the South Lawn.
"We have this video rendering of what this looks like," White explained. "We literally have the trees in the South Lawn, so we'll know exactly where the sun is until it sets. All the logistics are done."
White proposed setting up large screens at nearby The Ellipse Park, which can accommodate up to 85,000 fans. The promotion will soon announce how fans can acquire free tickets to watch from the park.
"There's a park that's right there," White said on March 12. "We're gonna be ticketing 85,000 people in the Ellipse, and the tickets are free. We'll announce how we're gonna be giving them away soon, but you should plan on going to Washington, D.C., for this event."
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