He told himself he was going to lose.
That’s not a fighter’s nerves talking. That’s not pre-fight psychology dressed up for a press conference. That was Justin Gaethje, 37 years old, carrying the interim UFC lightweight belt into the most theatrical arena in combat sports history, actively convincing himself failure was coming.
“I told myself I was going to get embarrassed,” he would say afterward, “so I can go to my most primal place and dig deep.”
What followed, on the South Lawn of the White House in Washington D.C., in front of a sitting American president on his 80th birthday, against the most feared lightweight on the planet, was not embarrassment. It was one of the most extraordinary upsets in UFC history.

Gaethje stopped the previously unbeaten Ilia Topuria via corner stoppage at the end of the fourth round to become the undisputed UFC lightweight champion. Record: 28 wins, 5 losses.
Twenty of those wins by KO or TKO. A career that began in 2011 in smaller promotions, built through Division I wrestling at the University of Northern Colorado, shaped by the copper mining town of Safford, Arizona where toughness isn’t a lifestyle choice — it’s just what the place demands of you.
This title has been hunting Gaethje for six years.
He chased it against Khabib Nurmagomedov at UFC 254 and was submitted in the second round. He chased it against Charles Oliveira at UFC 274 and was choked out in the first. In between, he won the BMF title, lost it to Max Holloway in one of the most dramatic final rounds in recent UFC memory, and kept coming back because stopping is simply not in the wiring.
In January, he dismantled Paddy Pimblett over five rounds to claim the interim lightweight belt. That bought him a date with destiny — and with Topuria.
JAY | JPS SAYS: “Gaethje has never been the most polished fighter in any room. He’s been the most willing. The difference between him and every other contender who came close is that he doesn’t fight for comfort — he fights to find out what he’s made of. On Sunday night, at the White House, the whole world found out.”
Topuria was no soft landing. The Georgian-Spaniard arrived at UFC Freedom 250 at 17-0 with 15 finishes, a two-division champion who had already knocked out both Alexander Volkanovski and Max Holloway on his way to featherweight gold before moving up to capture the lightweight belt by finishing Oliveira last year.
He entered as a -520 betting favourite. In any rational reading of the fight, he was expected to win comfortably. And for one terrible round, it looked exactly like that.
In the second, Topuria nearly ended it. He hunted the body with a ferocity that floored Gaethje with a left hook to the liver, moved to mount, and began working submissions — an armbar, a triangle, back to the armbar.
Gaethje survived, barely, grinding through the clock with what he would later describe as pure primal instinct.
Then the tide turned.

From the third round on, Gaethje’s durability — the thing that defines him above all else — began to matter more than Topuria’s precision. His jab started finding a home. His right hands were landing with increasing authority.
By the fourth round, Gaethje landed a heavy right that badly hurt Topuria, followed with a head kick and a flying knee that pinned him to the cage. Topuria finished the round with both eyes swollen and his face marked and bloodied.
When he returned to his corner, his team made the call. The fight was over.
The scene that followed was pure Gaethje. The backflip off the Octagon fence has been his trademark since his UFC debut, when he stopped Michael Johnson and celebrated by vaulting himself into the air. He has done it at the biggest moments of his career.
He did it again on Sunday. On the South Lawn of the White House. In front of Donald Trump. Fifteen post-fight bonuses into a career built entirely on the premise that every single fight is worth everything you have.
“His skills are unmatched when he’s fresh and I’m fresh,” Gaethje had said before the fight, “but my durability, my tenacity and my heart will carry me through those first couple rounds, and nobody can outwork me in Round 3, and especially the championship rounds.”
He was right. He was right about everything.

The road here was not clean. It rarely is for the fighters who value the journey too much to take shortcuts. Gaethje went 27-5 across fifteen years, winning in ways that made people forget the names of the opponents across from him. He amassed 15 performance bonuses not by winning safely but by refusing the concept entirely.
At 37, in the year he was supposed to be winding down, on a lawn he probably never imagined he’d fight on, against a man half the cage thought was untouchable, Justin Gaethje became the undisputed UFC lightweight champion of the world.
He told himself he was going to lose. The Octagon had other ideas…
📸 Images via Zuffa LLC / Getty Images / NBC





































