Marlins to raise awareness for childhood cancer as part of league-wide effort

The Miami Marlins will join Major League Baseball and all MLB Clubs in a league-wide effort to raise childhood cancer awareness by dedicating a special day at Marlins Park on Sunday, September 25. This is a continuation of the inaugural "Childhood Cancer Awareness Day," which Major League Baseball is launching today.

September 2nd, 2016

The Miami Marlins will join Major League Baseball and all MLB Clubs in a league-wide effort to raise childhood cancer awareness by dedicating a special day at Marlins Park on Sunday, September 25. This is a continuation of the inaugural "Childhood Cancer Awareness Day," which Major League Baseball is launching today.
The Marlins will host Pediatric Cancer Awareness Day at Marlins Park on Sunday, September 25, in which a pregame ceremony will take place to recognize local Pediatric Cancer organizations, who will also receive a donation. Other activities include a Resource Fair, a gold ribbon painted on the field, and current patients involved in pregame activation (ceremonial first pitch, lineup card and rosin bag delivery, play ball announcement, etc.). There will also be a Marlins pregame 5K run on September 25 at Marlins Park to support the Marlins Foundation in support of Pediatric Cancer organizations. Additionally, on September 6, Marlins Ayudan along with "Mr. Marlin" Jeff Conine will visit Alex's Place at UHealth's Sylvester Comprehensive Cancer Center. Lastly, on September 10, Dr. Francisco "Frank" Civantos, Head and Neck Cancer Surgeon and Co-Director of Sylvester Head and Cancer Surgery, will be recognized pregame and throw out the ceremonial first pitch.
In partnership with Stand Up To Cancer (SU2C), MLB encouraged Clubs to support this new initiative in commemoration of childhood cancer awareness month through a variety of special activations. On September 2nd, all Major League players, coaches, umpires and grounds crew members will wear gold ribbon decals and wristbands to further promote awareness for childhood cancer, which is the leading cause of death by disease in children aged 15 and under in the United States. In Canada, more than 1,500 children will be diagnosed with cancer this year. Every year, an estimated 250,000 new cases of cancer affect children under the age of 20 worldwide.
All Clubs were able to choose to partner with local nonprofits, including hospital partners or organizations focused on childhood cancer, for their Childhood Cancer Awareness Day activations.
MLB Advanced Media will coordinate a digital effort to increase exposure of this effort by placing information and editorial features on MLB.com, Club sites and MLBCommunity.org.
MLB and Clubs have supported the fight against cancer over the years. As Stand Up To Cancer's founding donor, Major League Baseball has provided both financial support (nearly $40 million) and countless opportunities to build the Stand Up To Cancer grassroots movement by encouraging fans around the world to get involved. MLB has recognized SU2C for the past six years during the World Series. Recent Club activations have included special gold pediatric cancer awareness batting practice t-shirts, online campaigns to empower fans to become fundraisers for pediatric cancer research and donations to local children's hospitals. Previous league-wide efforts included a $1 million donation to the CureSearch National Childhood Cancer Foundation.