Mixed Martial Arts-Gaethje rips up script to kick off new UFC TV era


Jan 24, 2026; Las Vegas, Nevada, USA; Justin Gaethje (red gloves) fights Paddy Pimblett (blue gloves) during UFC 324 at T-Mobile Arena. Mandatory Credit: Stephen R. Sylvanie-Imagn Images

Jan 25 (Reuters) - Justin Gaethje ‌rolled back the years to beat Paddy Pimblett and claim the interim UFC lightweight title as ‌the flagship organisation in mixed martial arts kicked off a new era in the ‌first event of its new TV broadcast deal with Paramount in Las Vegas on Saturday.

Faced with a dangerous opponent six years younger than him, the 37-year-old American seized the moment, punishing Pimblett over five rounds and setting up a showdown with champion Ilia ‍Topuria that may take place on the White House lawn.

“The White ‍House is in June. I represent this ‌country, I represented it tonight," Gaethje told reporters after securing the interim belt for the second time. "There's no ‍way ​they're keeping me off that card unless I'm dead."

The American's victory over the charismatic, teak-tough Englishman Pimblett was the perfect start for Paramount's deal with the UFC, which came into effect on ⁠January 1 and is worth a reported $7.7 billion over seven years.

13 ‌UFC NUMBERED EVENTS

Under the terms of the deal, Paramount will make 13 UFC numbered events, which are usually headlined by title ⁠fights, and 30 ‍other cards per year available to subscribers to their streaming platform. Some cards will be shown free to air on the CBS network.

It is a marked change for the UFC, which went from struggling to find broadcast partners in ‍the sport's infancy to becoming a pay-per-view behemoth in the ‌North American market, with cards featuring title fights almost always on pay-per-view in recent years.

UFC President Dana White has been instrumental in the journey of mixed martial arts from the fringes to the mainstream, and at the post-fight press conference on Saturday, he said that the first Paramount show had been a huge success.

"We'll have numbers on Tuesday or Wednesday, but this exceeded expectations beyond belief for Paramount, so we know it killed it - we just don't know the exact number yet, but they're saying it exceeded by, like, double," White ‌said.

Fighter pay is always a bone of contention in the UFC and there have been rumblings of discontent from fighters who previously would have received a share of the pay-per-view revenues about the new broadcast deal.

However, discretionary bonuses were doubled and ​headliners Gaethje and Pimblett each received $100,000 as a "Fight of the Night" award.

"We've got a real good feeling that this is going to be a great relationship for the next seven years," White said.

(Reporting by Philip O'Connor, editing by Ed Osmond)

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