ESPN sports announcer Dick Vitale announced this week that doctors told him he is cancer-free. Vitale said that after a PET scan he learned of the good news, writing that "Santa came early" for him and his family this year.
He said that after 35 radiation treatments, his voice has been affected, but signaled that he is in good spirits and is hopeful that he will recover. He thanked his fans and the ESPN audience for their "incredible support."
In July he was diagnosed with vocal cord cancer, making it his third cancer diagnosis after his melanoma and lymphoma diagnoses.
ESPN Announcer Dick Vitale Shares Lymphoma Diagnosis
The 82-year-old says this diagnosis and another diagnosis from August are unrelated.
In 2021, Vitale revealed publicly that he was again battling cancer, that time after a diagnosis with lymphoma. The popular basketball analyst made the news public after having been diagnosed with cancer previously.
In August of that year he underwent multiple surgeries to remove melanoma and was later informed he was cancer-free at that time. Vitale said his multiple diagnoses were unrelated, according to doctors.
He underwent months of chemotherapy treatments to try to improve his prognosis.
Vitale has been broadcasting college basketball games since 1979 and had planned to return to work for the 2023-2024 college basketball season.