Justin Gaethje and Ciryl Gane turned the UFC White House card into a night that punished the odds market. Gaethje beat Ilia Topuria by TKO corner stoppage at 5:00 of round four to win the undisputed lightweight title, while Gane stopped Alex Pereira by TKO in round two at 1:27 to claim the interim heavyweight belt.
Betting Lines Miss as Justin Gaethje and Ciryl Gane Win Big at UFC White House
Gaethje brought the kind of pace and damage that can force a favourite into a bad night. That showed up in the numbers, with Gaethje landing 119 total strikes to Topuria’s 111, and 91 significant strikes to Topuria’s 97. Topuria entered the fight as the heavy favourite across the market. People asked who’s going to win at UFC White House and was answered with prices ranging from around -520 in some books and as steep as -1000 elsewhere. While Gaethje ranged from about +350 to +525. The KO was a real upset.
The co-main event was priced much closer, and that made the Gane result easier to imagine than the market probably wanted to admit. Online books had Pereira around -108 and Gane around -112, while other books had it near a pick’em or a very small edge either way. Gane ended it in round two with a barrage that left Pereira unable to recover, and the official result was a TKO at 1:27.
The betting lines told two different stories. Topuria was treated like a dominant favourite, so Gaethje’s win landed as the bigger market shock of the two fights. Pereira vs Gane sat much closer to even money, which meant Gane’s win was a surprise, but not a full-scale upset in the same way. In plain terms, the main event was the fight that broke the script, while the co-main was the one where the underdog value aged better than the public number suggested.
The White House setting added to the feel of the card, but the results were driven by styles more than spectacle. Gaethje won by wearing on Topuria over four rounds, then forcing the stoppage when the champion’s corner called it. Gane, meanwhile, won by making Pereira work at range until the openings came, then closing the door fast. Taken together, the two fights said the same thing in different ways: a market favorite can still lose when the challenger controls tempo, range, and damage better than expected.
















