Key events
Donald Trump and UFC president Dana White have now made their entrance, emerging from the White House to a Color Guard from the “military district of Washington” in a scene that feels equal parts campaign rally, state ceremony and fight night. As the Zac Brown Band reaches the closing bars of the Star-Spangled Banner, a rare joint flyover by the Blue Angels and Thunderbirds roars overhead, providing a display of American military might to match the scale of the occasion.
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The four-man studio desk for the broadcast consists of former UFC champions Dominick Cruz, Chris Weidman and Michael Bisping alongside veteran play-by-play broadcaster Brendan Fitzgerald. Judging by the opening segment, they are also serving as tonight’s department of patriotism, a role embraced enthusiastically by all involved, including Bisping despite the minor complication of being English.
“The energy, the spirit, the patriotism and the whole show that was put on – it gave me goosebumps,” Bisping said of Saturday’s Fan Frest at the Ellipse. “It really did. And now, to be sitting here in the White House with the fights starting very, very soon ... what an incredible week.”
Weidman then raised the stakes.
“The atmosphere was unbelievable,” he said. “As an American, I haven’t felt that type of patriotism in my life. Everywhere you went, it was ‘USA! USA!’ People just chanting ‘America’ nonstop. It just felt really good. It made me super proud to be American.”
Not to be outdone, Cruz recalled a moment involving the national bird.
“When that eagle flew over the top of us, man, you could shed a tear,” he said. “This is the pinnacle of any athlete’s life – to show up at the White House, much less to get to fight at the White House. So how special is it to be here?”
Fitzgerald completed the sweep.
“Unbelievable,” he said. “And after such success at the Olympics earlier this year – the Winter Olympics – and the Tkachuk brothers from the US gold medal-winning hockey team in attendance tonight as well to celebrate the patriotic spirit that this event does bring.”
For those keeping score at home, the running tally through the opening segment stood at one bald eagle, multiple chants of “USA!”, Olympic heroes, hockey royalty and at least three grown men fighting back goosebumps.
Heidi Androl, a reporter on the UFC’s telecast, says organizers are closely monitoring a line of thunderstorms moving toward Washington, with weather officials focused less on rain than on the threat of high winds and lightning.
“I was just down at the command center and was able to speak with Kevin Mahoney from DTN Weather Services, a private weather company commissioned by the UFC,” Androl says on the Paramount+ broadcast. “They’re working closely with the Presidential Weather Office and the National Weather Service tracking a cell of thunderstorms over West Virginia that is set to move into the Metro DC area between now and 9pm.
“It is not rain that they are concerned with. It is high winds and lightning. I am told that if that happens, a shelter in place will be initiated.”
According to Androl, UFC security officials have designated shelter locations for every department, with personnel on the South Lawn set to move into the Eisenhower Executive Office Building, which also houses the fighters’ locker rooms.
She added that any shelter-in-place order would be lifted “within 30 minutes of the last lightning strike within a six-mile radius”, though forecasters currently expect conditions to clear by around 9pm.
Before the cage fighting came the motocross. On Saturday, Nitro Circus star Travis Pastrana and a group of motocross riders performed jumps and stunts on the South Lawn as part of the build-up festivities. Pastrana had been invited by UFC chief executive Dana White to perform a dirt-bike backflip against the backdrop of the White House, a sentence that might have felt ripped from a Mike Judge screenplay not all that long ago. The stunt show formed part of a broader weekend program that has included fighter weigh-ins at the Lincoln Memorial, concerts, fan festivals and enough pyrotechnics to power a national political convention and Wrestlemania back to back. Welcome to Costco, I love you.

Storm forecast delays first fight to 9pm ET
The weather has landed the first blow at UFC Freedom 250. With thunderstorms forecast across the Washington area on Sunday evening, UFC officials delayed the start of the White House card by approximately one hour. Broadcast coverage is still scheduled to begin at 8pm ET on Paramount+, but the first fight is now expected no earlier than 9pm, with promotion officials indicating the exact timing remains subject to changing conditions.
The delay highlights the challenges facing one of the most ambitious events in the UFC’s 33-year history. Mixed martial arts cards are almost always staged indoors, and the promotion has held only one previous open-air event: UFC 112 in Abu Dhabi in 2010. With further storms possible very much in play for later in the evening, Sunday’s card on the White House South Lawn may require additional adjustments before the night is over.

Beyond the octagon, the fighter walkouts and the spectacle of a UFC card on White House grounds lies another story: who gets access and what it costs. Sidney Blumenthal argues that Sunday’s event has become a nexus of political fundraising, corporate influence and presidential branding, with million-dollar donor dinners, seven-figure hospitality packages and a guest list that reads as a who’s who of Trump’s political and business network. For Blumenthal, the looming presence of “the Claw” is merely the most visible symbol of a much larger transaction.

Tonight's order of play
Here’s a look at tonight’s seven-fight card (in reverse order). The first fight is expected to begin at 8pm ET, with the main event likely shortly before midnight depending on fight length and any weather delays.
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Ilia Topuria v Justin Gaethje, UFC lightweight championship unification (five rounds)
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Alex Pereira v Ciryl Gane, interim UFC heavyweight championship (five rounds)
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Sean O’Malley v Aiemann Zahabi, bantamweights (three rounds)
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Derrick Lewis v Josh Hokit, heavyweights (three rounds)
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Maurício Ruffy v Michael Chandler, lightweights (three rounds)
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Bo Nickal v Kyle Daukaus, middleweights (three rounds)
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Diego Lopes v Steve Garcia, featherweights (three rounds)

The most dangerous opponent on the card may prove to be the weather radar. Thunderstorms remain in the forecast over Washington, with a 60% chance of rain, heavy downpours and wind gusts approaching 34mph threatening to disrupt tonight’s festivities. While the canopy should keep the octagon dry, UFC officials will be monitoring lightning closely. A single strike within eight miles of the venue would trigger an automatic 30-minute suspension of the event.
The Weather Channel highlighted the meteorological challenges earlier on Sunday, warning that oppressive humidity, triple-digit heat indices and even swarms of mosquitoes and gnats could complicate proceedings alongside the threat of thunderstorms.
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About three hours later, the White House’s official rapid response account on X came in hot with a rather different assessment, quote-posting: “This event is about celebrating America’s unmatched greatness after 250 years – which apparently doesn’t sit well with the friendless loser who wrote this bullshit clickbait headline.”
Sheesh!
Preamble
For most of America’s 249-year, 11-month history, the White House lawn has been reserved for state dinners, diplomatic ceremonies, Easter egg rolls, turkey pardons and carefully choreographed displays of presidential power.
After tonight, we can add cage fighting to that list.
Beneath a 92ft superstructure known as “the Claw”, about 4,300 spectators are expected to gather on the South Lawn to watch Ultimate Fighting Championship fighters punch, kick and grapple inside an octagon erected a short walk from the Oval Office. The event, billed as UFC Freedom 250, coincides with Donald Trump’s 80th birthday and forms part of the administration’s broader celebrations marking the 250th anniversary of American independence.
The result is a spectacle without obvious precedent in modern US political life: a private, for-profit sporting event staged on federal grounds, featuring the world’s largest mixed martial arts promotions and unfolding at the official residence of the president of the United States.
By the standards of the Trump era, perhaps that no longer sounds particularly surprising. Yet even by those standards, the scene is extraordinary. Rising above the temporary arena is a lattice of steel, video boards and lighting rigs more that wouldn’t be out of place at a major music festival. Around it sit grandstands, hospitality areas and thousands of seats occupied by invited guests, political allies and US armed forces members required to meet strict weight-to-height and fitness specifications.

The event arrives at a complicated moment for the administration. Earlier on Sunday, Trump announced a peace agreement with Iran that would reopen the strategically vital Strait of Hormuz and bring an end to nearly four months of fighting in the region, though questions remain about the deal’s durability. A legal challenge seeking to halt the White House card was rejected on Friday, clearing the way for an event that critics have portrayed as an extravagant blending of politics, entertainment and private business interests.
Supporters see something else: a celebration of American culture, sporting achievement and the country’s approaching semiquincentennial.
Either way, the imagery promises to be unlike anything previously witnessed at 1600 Pennsylvania Avenue.
Over the coming hours, fighters will make their entrances toward an octagon built on the South Lawn. Trump is expected cageside. Thunderstorms remain in the forecast (more on that shortly). And one of the most unusual nights in White House history is about to begin at the top of the hour.
Bryan will be here shortly. In the meantime here’s Joseph Gedeon’s lookahead to tonight’s semiquincentennial cage-fighting spectacular.
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