Norfolk: an Ultimate Fighting Championship (UFC) fight planned in the White House will take place on the 80th birthday of Donald Trump, the president said, despite the much -hyped event that was previously announced before July 4.
“On June 14 next year we will have a large UFC fight in the White House – directly in the White House, on the White House site,” Trump told a crowd of navy sailors on the huge norfolk norfolk in Virginia.
He did not say that June 14 is his birthday or that will be 80th next year.
On Trump’s 79th birthday this year, he held a military parade that was intended to commemorate the establishment of the US Army.
In August, UFC boss Dana White said that the mixed martial arts in the White House will be held on July 4 next year, the day that the US marks the 250 -year anniversary of the founding.
Trump has been a regular guest at the often bloody UFC matches, where fighters hit, kick and struggle with their opponent in a non-hold-very-very struggle to submit or knockout.
Breaking the brutal combat sport to the center of American political power will first mark a historical mark.
During a press conference that is shared on the YouTube channel of UFC, White said that early next year: “We are going to look at building the White House card, which I will now tell you will be the largest fight card ever collected in the history of this company.”
Ultimate Fighting Championship is the largest and most successful organization in the fast-growing world of MMA, a mix of martial arts disciplines such as Jiu-Jitsu, kickboxing, boxing and struggling.
Bouts takes place in an eight-sided ring-fed “The Octagon” limit by a chain link fencing.
With a few exceptions, such as eye gouging male and female hunters use almost every technique to attack their opponent.
The popularity of sport in young men’s and important demography in the American elections of 2024 and the long association of Trump with the UFC, have made the president a regular game at some of his more high-profile events, where he is greeted as a rock star.
The brutal character and high injury rate mean that the sport is controversial, in which doctors deny the potential for brain damage in fighters who are repeatedly hit in the head, although it has won increasing mainstream acceptance in recent years.

