Last night (Sun., June 14, 2026), Ultimate Fighting Championship (UFC) ventured forth to the White House South Lawn in Washington, D.C., for UFC Freedom 250. After months and months of rumors and speculation, the UFC White House finally arrived! Two title fights and five other high-quality matchups made up the shorter-than-average event, but there was plenty of spectacle to fill out the night. Despite constant reports of inclement weather, the event ran smoothly and certainly lived up to the hype as a one-of-a-kind combat sports event.
Let’s take a look back over the best performances and techniques of this historic evening:
The Highlight Finally Captures Gold
I am surprised Justin Gaethje defeated Ilia Topuria. I’m downright shocked he did it while landing just a single low kick!
Indeed, Gaethje came to this fight with a great game plan. Unlike Charles Oliveira — who tried to walk down the former Featherweight kingpin and walked into a brutal KO for his efforts — Gaethje was largely content to fight on the outside. He made Topuria work extremely hard for every exchange, feeding him a steady stream of jabs. If Topuria was too obvious with his pressure, Gaethje would grab a leg, move up to a collar-tie, and then force-feed the double champ an uppercut.
It’s not like Gaethje gave up when Topuria did finally gain the pocket. He fought fire with fire, throwing heavy leather in return despite being outgunned early on. He started building off his previous offense, using the threat of the right uppercut to sneak right hooks around the guard. Late in the fight, Gaethje started pushing into the clinch and staying there, digging knees and uppercuts into an already tired and bloody foe.
Topuria didn’t get steamrolled. He landed at a ridiculously high clip for the first two rounds and nearly stopped Gaethje with a left hook in the second round. He seemed to be rushing for the finish, however, leaving him with much less energy in the late rounds. Combine that with his relative lack of experience in this kind of grueling war of attrition, and it makes sense that Gaethje’s veteran experience shined so brilliantly in the second half of the fight.
Justin Gaethje has been an elite action fighter for a decade now. Nobody has been more consistently entertaining in the history of the sport. I’m really glad to see him finally capture undisputed gold, as well as turn back the clock in this monumental upset win.
Poatan Walks Into A Trap
Ciryl Gane really played his hand beautifully in the UFC White House co-main event.
Trading with Alex Pereira is an extremely dangerous game. Nobody wants to get hit by “Poatan,” and throwing punches at the intimidating Brazilian can feel like an act of hubris. Pereira has great presence in the pocket, an ability to make his opponents feel that he sees everything coming, has an answer for every shot they might throw. In reality, hesitancy plays right into his game, even if it feels like the “safe” move.
Gane threaded the needle perfectly. He won the early distance exchanges, landing his snappy Southpaw jab reasonably often and digging some hard low kicks to the thigh as well. Pereira’s answer to losing the distance battle is to increase his pressure, but Gane didn’t lose his composure. He countered with jabs and reactive takedown attempts, giving Pereira a reason to hesitate despite the necessity of his pressure.
As a result, he walked forward but didn’t throw as much, giving Gane opportunities to walk him into looping counter shots. Surprisingly, it was a stiff jab from Gane that started the finishing sequence, stopping Pereira in his tracks and sending him to the canvas. Gane’s followup flurry was absolutely vicious … and it probably included a half-dozen shots to the back of the head.
“Poatan” showed his heart by getting back to his feet and trying to hold out, but the fight was over. One last barrage sealed the deal, securing Gane his second interim title win in a career-best performance.
Bantamweight’s American Sniper
Sean O’Malley just scored his first knockout win since August 2023.
Aiemann Zahabi, per usual, entered the fight with an interesting game plan. He channeled his inner Mauricio Rua, charging into low kicks when O’Malley backed off. It worked to some extent, but he failed to establish any real threat with his hands to go alongside the successful low kicks. Seriously, Zahabi hardly landed a head shot in the two-round fight, and he wasn’t even throwing ‘em for most of round two.
Meanwhile, O’Malley was popping his nose with frequent jabs and took a good few right hands to the body as well. Given O’Malley wasn’t showing any real effects from the low kicks, it’s very difficult to score some inside low kicks over clean head shots. Appropriately, Zahabi tried to ramp up his offense in the later stages of round two, pressing forward with actual punches rather than the mere idea of potentially punching. Immediately, O’Malley sat him down with a counter left hand. Before Zahabi could even stand back up fully, O’Malley laid him out with a lovely 1-2 down the pipe.
Now 2-0 since his disastrous pair of losses to Merab Dvalishvili, “The Suga Show” is right back in the mix. If Petr Yan is victorious in the rubber match with “The Machine,” expect O’Malley vs. Yan II to come to an Octagon near you sometime next year.
Hokit Dominates The Black Beast
Josh Hokit picked up his second ranked win in two months, and “The Incredible Hok” made it look easy.
Hokit threw a ton of kicks in the early going, biding his time for the inevitable Derrick Lewis haymaker. As soon as it came his direction, he ducked down for an easy double leg takedown. From top position, he spent the rest of the round abusing Lewis with ground strikes, only failing to secure the first-round finish because his armbar mechanics are terrible.
Fortunately for Hokit, it didn’t matter in the least. Lewis was Kimbo Slice vs. DaDa 5000-levels of tired by round two! He would throw an overhand like a fastball then nearly collapse from the effort. Hokit, meanwhile, continued to pop him with jabs before starting to unleash fast combinations of heavy punches. His right hand literally could not miss, and though Lewis walked through about a dozen of them, he eventually crumbled beneath the onslaught.
Derrick Lewis is washed, while Josh Hokit is legit. We knew both of these things already, but the UFC White House confirmed as much in bloody fashion.
A Mortal Kombat KO
Mauricio Ruffy effortlessly knocked out Michael Chandler.
Despite the 11-year age difference and wide betting odds, it was still hard not to be impressed by the Brazilian, who absolutely styled on the former Bellator king. Chandler tried to juke his way into a takedown and never came anywhere close. He was stuck on the end of Ruffy’s shotgun jab, and before too long, the power shots started landing as well.
Ruffy’s shot selection was impressive. Without rushing at all, he stung Chandler with long right hands, intercepting jabs, heavy uppercuts, a ripping liver hook, and two separate wheel kicks. Even when Chandler’s guard was raised, the veteran couldn’t absorb the impact without stumbling. The eventual finish was violent and precise, a great display of Ruffy’s talents.
The call for a title shot was premature, but Ruffy has recovered well from his loss to Benoit Saint Denis.
Oh, You’re A Striker Now?
It’s fair to say Bo Nickal has never looked better.
It’s unusual for such a dominant wrestler to fight along the outside, but Nickal actually looked really comfortable there! Kyle Daukaus did what he was supposed to do, pressing forward and trying to take Nickal’s head off right away. Showing off his vision, Nickal effortlessly slipped a punch for an easy slam takedown. For the next three minutes, Nickal roughed up Daukaus with elbows. The fight only moved back to the feet because the referee was strangely impatient, but Nickal stayed locked in. Daukaus tried to press and walked right into a powerful 3-2 combination. He hit the canvas hard, and the fight was over in a flash!
In this performance, Nickal put together his wrestling pedigree with his improving striking. More importantly, he showed off great composure, looking in complete control for the entirety of the fight. Really, he’s starting to look like the future title contender that was promised when he first joined the UFC roster.
It’s time for a step back up in competition.
Brick Chin, Brick Fists
Diego Lopes is not a perfect striker.
Steve Garcia really beat him up for most of the fight. He started quick, unleashing fluid combinations to touch up Lopes in the opening minute. As the two settled into a more reasonable pace at range, Garcia’s superior jab, movement, and feints allowed him to line up powerful punches straight to the chin. Lopes, conversely, was really struggling to find the target with his hands.
Fortunately for the Brazilian, he can shrug off punishment and make his own lands count. He started to find his timing on the counter, and he finally connected clean with a right hand a couple minutes into the second. Immediately, Lopes turned up the heat, firing in combination. Garcia made the admirable choice to stand his ground and try to back Lopes off him.
Wrong move.
With a more stationary foe in front of him, Lopes was able to put his powerful hooks together. Just a couple exchanges later, Garcia hit the canvas, and a quick flurry of ground strikes knocked him cold. As soon as Lopes began connecting, Garcia’s fluidity and slickness stopped mattering almost immediately.
He may not be a perfect fighter, but Lopes has incredible physical attributes and isn’t leaving the Featherweight Top Five just yet.



































