The Dale Jr. Foundation Announces Gloves Program for 2018

Ron Lemasters | 7/21/2018

Dale Jr. News The Dale Jr. Foundation

Dale Jr. announced today The Dale Jr. Foundation will support Nationwide Children’s Hospital with a Driven to Give Gloves program that features 32 participating Cup Series drivers.

MOORESVILLE, N.C. (July 21, 2018) – As has been for the past four years, The Dale Jr. Foundation will support Nationwide Children’s Hospital with a Driven to Give Gloves program, but this year the program features 32 NASCAR Cup Series drivers and all four of JR Motorsports’ NASCAR Xfinity Series drivers.

During the Watkins Glen race weekend, 36 Cup and Xfinity drivers will wear Dale Jr.-inspired skeleton gloves to raise awareness and funds for Nationwide Children’s Hospital. Each pair of gloves will be signed by the driver wearing them during the race weekend and by Dale Jr. before going up for auction on Aug. 8, 2018.  The Driven to Give Glove proceeds will benefit the Dale and Amy Earnhardt Fund at Nationwide Children’s Hospital which supports the courageous patients and their families in the area of pediatric injury rehabilitation, research and prevention. Check back to bid on your favorite driver’s gloves and help Dale and Amy help kids everywhere. For more information on the Dale and Amy Earnhardt Fund, click here.

Nationwide, a longtime partner of Earnhardt Jr. and the entire Earnhardt family, revealed a butterfly-themed paint scheme featuring Nationwide Children’s Hospital for the Watkins Glen race on Aug. 5, with the driver of the No. 88 Hendrick Motorsports Chevrolet, Alex Bowman, and Patient Champion Ashyzia Jackson.

“We’ve done a lot with the Gloves program through the years at The Dale Jr. Foundation, but this year we wanted to open it up to more people,” said Earnhardt Jr. of the program. “To have 32 of my former competitors and all four of our JR Motorsports’ drivers sign on to this to help the Nationwide Children’s Hospital continue the life-saving work they do there is impressive, and I can’t thank them all enough. Nationwide Children’s Hospital is a huge part of the work we do at The Foundation.”

Last November, Earnhardt Jr. and his wife, Amy, created the Dale and Amy Earnhardt Fund at Nationwide Children’s Hospital. The fund, which was seeded with an $88,888 donation from The Dale Jr. Foundation, will champion the cause of pediatric injury rehabilitation, research and prevention at America’s largest pediatric hospital and research center. The fund launched on “Giving Tuesday,” a global day of giving.

Over the past two seasons, the Driven to Give Gloves program has raised more than $100,000 for Nationwide Children’s Hospital.

One of Nationwide Children’s Hospital’s Patient Champions, Bricen Thall of West Winfield, New York, will be joined by his family for a weekend at Watkins Glen International that will let them get up-close and behind the scenes at the storied track. Bricen, who was born with a condition known as Hirschsprung’s Disease, had his first surgery at just one week old. The next two years of his life included many procedures, surgeries and hospitalizations. Unfortunately, success from each surgery only lasted for a short period of time.

Doctors referred him to the Center for Colorectal and Pelvic Reconstruction at Nationwide Children’s Hospital and, after more surgeries and many health challenges, he is now enjoying the world around him in a way that doctors could not promise when his journey first began. For the first time in his life, he has gone an entire year without any hospital stays.

“Nationwide Children’s has a very special place in our hearts for everything they have done for Bricen,” said his mother, Colby Thall. “They have given him a better quality of life and the chance to experience all that a 5-year-old should.”

Bricen and his family will receive the red-carpet treatment at Watkins Glen. Each year, Nationwide chooses a patient to represent all of the many patients who are treated at Nationwide Children’s Hospital. The Patient Champion Program was created as a way to tell the story of the work that is being done at the hospital.