NEW $100 Amazon Gift Card GIVEAWAY TIME to celebrate Prime Day! (June 23rd - 26th)
Rules:
🔁 Retweet & ❤️ Like this post!
Ends:
6/18/2026 11:59pm PDT
BONUS ENTRY:
What will you be looking for on sale during Amazon Prime Day? (June 23rd - 26th)
*Terms and conditions: 1 x $100 Giftcard will be given away. Multiple/Duplicate entries in a single day will not be accepted. Anyone found to use multiple accounts to enter will be ineligible. This giveaway is not sponsored by or affiliated with Amazon or X
The world may have forgotten Peter Parker, but he hasn't forgotten them.
Watch the new trailer for #SpiderManBrandNewDay, in theatres July 31. Tickets on sale NOW.
$100 Amazon Gift Card GIVEAWAY TIME to celebrate Prime Day! (June 23rd - 26th)
Rules:
🔁 Retweet & ❤️ Like this post!
Ends:
6/17/2026 11:59pm PDT
BONUS ENTRY:
What will you be looking for on sale during Amazon Prime Day? (June 23rd - 26th)
*Terms and conditions: 1 x $100 Giftcard will be given away. Multiple/Duplicate entries in a single day will not be accepted. Anyone found to use multiple accounts to enter will be ineligible. This giveaway is not sponsored by or affiliated with Amazon or X
#UFCFreedom250 🥀
One of Topuria’s biggest strengths historically is that he’s extremely patient and calculated. He usually doesn’t force things. He feints, gathers reads, makes small defensive adjustments, and then detonates when he sees the opening.
Against Volkanovski, for example, he wasn’t recklessly charging forward. He was gradually building pressure and looking for patterns before landing the finishing sequence.
Against Gaethje, it looked more like he was trying to prove a point.
Instead of winning exchanges, he seemed intent on winning the battle of power. That’s a dangerous mindset against a guy like Gaethje because Justin has spent his entire career surviving chaos.
The strange part is that Gaethje is exactly the type of opponent where you’d expect Topuria to be disciplined:
- Make him miss
- Counter the jab
- Attack the body
- Change angles
- Force Gaethje to reset
Instead, he stood in front of him far too often and accepted prolonged exchanges.
That’s why the lack of head movement stands out. It’s not just that his head wasn’t moving, it’s that it wasn’t the usual version of Topuria.
The Topuria that knocked out Volkanovski and Holloway was sharp, defensively responsible, and selective.
The version that fought Gaethje looked like he was trying to show everyone he was the bigger puncher.
And if you’re trying to out-dawg Gaethje in a dogfight, you’re playing his game, not yours.