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33rd Annual Miracle Tournament and Celebration Dinner

The 33rd Annual Miracle Tournament and Celebration Dinner benefiting Children's Miracle Network Hospitals, will take place June 24-25, 2024. We look forward to welcoming everyone to the NCR Country Club in Kettering, Ohio for the tournament and the National Museum of the United States Air Force in Dayton, Ohio for the Celebration Dinner*. Last year, more than 600 suppliers, vendors and business partners participated in the tournament or attended the Celebration Dinner*, interacting with Champion Children and their families. Thanks to their generous support, we were able to raise nearly $3 million for children’s hospitals across the United States.

*Celebration Dinner is by invitation only and reserved for Event Sponsors.

Join us June 24-25, 2024!

“We could not be more grateful for the incredible support of corporate partners like 7-Eleven, Inc., who, year in and year out, amaze us with their passion for our cause. Together with their customers, suppliers, vendors, Franchise Owners and employees, the impact of their fundraising efforts is helping us change kids’ health to change the future.”

- Aimee J. Daily, Ph.D.
President and CEO, Children’s Miracle Network Hospitals

Schedule of Events

Monday, June 24

  • 6:30 a.m. – Registration and Breakfast
  • 7:30 a.m. – Tee Time
  • 11:00 a.m. – Awards Lunch
  • 11:00 a.m. – Beer Garden Opens
  • 1:00 p.m. – Chip-to-Split and Ball Drop

Tuesday, June 25

  • 6:30 a.m. – Registration and Breakfast
  • 7:30 a.m. – Tee Time
  • 11:00 a.m. – Lunch
  • 11:00 a.m. – Beer Garden Opens
  • 1:30 p.m. – Tee Time
  • 6:00 p.m. – Awards Buffet Dinner
  • 6:45 p.m. – Chip-to-Split and Ball Drop

*Times are subject to change


Hotels

Marriott

Marriott at the University of Dayton
1414 South Patterson Boulevard
Dayton, Ohio 45409

Book your Room
Courtyard by Marriott

Courtyard Dayton-University of Dayton
2006 S Edwin C Moses Blvd
Dayton, OH 45417

Book your Room

Donations

If you're not able to attend the Miracle Tournament, you can still make a donation here. All proceeds will benefit CMN Hospitals.

Donate Online Auction Coming Soon!

Golf Club Shipping & Rental Information

NCR Country Club will have a limited number of rental clubs available this year. Because of the high demand over the last few years, the policy on securing rentals has changed.

Learn More

2024 Champion Children

Ryan
Age 14
Ryan
Age 14

Treated at University of Michigan Health at Sparrow Children's Center in Lansing, MI.

At 17 weeks pregnant, Ryan’s mom, Becky, was diagnosed with a subchorionic hematoma. Soon after, Becky was placed on bedrest for 6 weeks until Ryan was born via an emergency C-section at 23 weeks.

Ryan weighed one pound seven ounces at birth. In the University of Michigan Health at Sparrow Children’s Center’s Regional Neonatal Intensive Care Unit (RNICU), he was supported by a team of neonatologists, nurse practitioners, nurses, respiratory therapists, phlebotomists, and many others. Ryan’s time in the NICU was marked by underdeveloped lungs and bronchopulmonary dysplasia, multiple infections, intraventricular hemorrhages, necrotizing enterocolitis, and advanced retinopathy of prematurity.

After discharge, Ryan required regular follow-up appointments with many subspecialists, therapists, medical equipment providers, and others. He was readmitted that first year into the pediatric intensive care unit for breathing difficulties, and additional surgery.

Today, Ryan is a 14-year-old who exemplifies perseverance. He loves to build things, ride his bike and hoverboard, and play in the band!

Thanks to donations to Children’s Miracle Network Hospitals, Ryan had access to a team of lifesaving specialists in the neonatal intensive care unit after being 17 weeks prematurely.

Carah
Age 17
Carah
Age 17

Treated at Dayton Children’s Hospital in Dayton, OH.

At the age of three, Carah was diagnosed with childhood-onset fluency disorder (also known as stuttering). While most children outgrow a stutter by the age of 5, Carah did not. In 6th grade, a substitute teacher mocked her in class, leaving Carah spiraling with her self-esteem and confidence plummeting. She mentally and emotionally struggled and didn’t want to go to school. Carah saw countless speech therapists over the years but never felt there was a right fit as the focus was placed on her speech fluency and less on the deep, lingering emotional trauma she was experiencing. That changed when Carah turned to Dayton Children’s Speech Therapy Program. “...from the time we walked through those speech therapy doors, they took the time to actually talk with Carah and dug deeper to the parts that people can’t see. And helped Carah in learning tools and techniques to navigate those feelings and mental roadblocks,” her mom said. Carah will always have a stutter; however, she’s learned that her condition does not steal the power of her own voice. One way she’s doing that is by educating her former middle school by giving a keynote speech every year, now part of her school’s curriculum, about stuttering, understanding yourself and your feelings, and bullying. “Stuttering is a part of me, but it doesn’t define me. I have a lot of goals set for the future and I’m just getting started,” Carah said.

Thanks to donations to Children’s Miracle Network Hospitals, Carah received life-changing support from Dayton Children’s Speech Therapy Program, helping her self-esteem grow as she navigates Child Onset Fluency Disorder.

Gracie
Age 11
Gracie
Age 11

Treated at Levine Children's Hospital in Charlotte, NC.

At nine years old, Gracie found a bump below her ribs. After an ultrasound and an MRI, the doctors didn’t think the bump was cancerous, but they did a biopsy just in case. It took over two weeks to receive a final diagnosis: a rare soft tissue cancer called CIC-DUX4 sarcoma. Since there had been less than 200 reported cases to date, there was no definitive treatment plan. Over the next six months, Gracie underwent surgery, intensive chemotherapy, and IV infusions at Levine Children’s Hospital. Now in remission, 11-year-old Gracie helps other kids fighting cancer and lights up every room she enters. She returned to school as a fifth grader and is back to her favorite past time: playing soccer.

Thanks to the support of Children’s Miracle Network Hospitals, the Child Life program at Levine Children’s Hospital has the resources needed to give kids like Gracie the best and most comfortable care.

See All 2024 Champion Children >