
Mega Doctor News
A hospital stay, especially during the holiday season, can leave a person feeling blue due to the isolation and disruption it causes.
But the pediatric patients and their family members at South Texas Health System (STHS) Children’s were recently left seeing blue.
On Monday, December 22, 2025, Dallas Cowboys legend Michael Irvin, dressed in a blue Santa suit, made a surprise afternoon appearance at the facility, where he spent about two hours engaging with STHS Children’s patients, families and staff, as well as children from across the Rio Grande Valley who got wind of his visit.

“Christmas is all about kids,” says Irvin, the Pro Football Hall of Fame member who helped lead the Cowboys to three Super Bowl championships. “So, if they’re not able to go out and celebrate the holiday, it’s important for us to come to them and make sure they know how much they matter.”
Irvin, who was escorted onto the STHS Children’s campus by officers from the Weslaco Police Department, was greeted with much fanfare at the facility’s main entrance by members of the Pharr-San Juan-Alamo (PSJA) Early College High School Dreamettes and Capable Kids Sparks cheerleading team, as well as staff and community members.
Following a rapid-fire introduction to STHS department leaders and a photo opportunity in front of the hospital’s iconic, safari-themed mural, Irvin quickly changed into a blue Santa to surprise a group of patients and their family members gathered in the hospital’s third floor pediatric playroom.

Irvin autographed coloring pages of his likeness that the patients had proudly completed and took photographs with them and their family members before distributing Christmas presents to those in the hospital’s care and answering questions about his stories professional football career.
“Football is the only sport where there’s no such thing as individual isolated success,” says Irvin. “In sports like baseball, basketball and golf, you can have success by yourself. But in football, everything is interconnected and interdependent. Life is like that. Whether it’s an organization, a corporation or our most important entity, family, we can’t do it alone. That’s why it’s important for those of us out in the community to come to the hospital to give the children the love they deserve.”

After visiting with the audience in the pediatric playroom, Irvin went door-to-door to hand out Christmas presents and warm hugs to patients required to stay in their hospital rooms due to doctor’s orders, bringing big smiles to them and their awe-struck family members.
“I wanted them to know how important they are, not just to me but the entire community, while feeling the spirit of Christmas. But after this visit, I’m also left feeling the true essence of the holiday season,” says Irvin. “There are so many emptions you experience when you see a kid in the hospital. But when you walk into their rooms and see them smile and witness that moment of happiness, it really makes you check yourself. Many of us aren’t going through what they’re experiencing right now and yet we’re complaining about everything. These kids are just trying to get better. So, it makes you realize you must do better.”
Irvin, who says he’s hoping to make return visits to STHS Children’s, ended his surprise visit with kind words for the hospital staff dedicated to providing quality, compassionate care to the littlest of patients.
“It’s hard to watch a kid going through that situation,” says Irvin. “So, you have to give thanks to the doctors, nurses and staff who put in the work daily to ensure these children get well.”
But for Lance Ames, the chief executive officer at STHS Children’s and STHS Edinburg, the hospital’s success in helping provide healing and hope to kids and their families wouldn’t be possible without the kindness of the community, including legends like Irvin.
“There’s no doubt that he’s an all-star on and off the field,” says Ames. “Every time he walked into a room, you could see the sparkle in patients’ eyes, you could feel the magic in the air. It’s an honor to add Michael Irvin, a Super Bowl champion, to our care team at STHS Children’s.”









