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Los Angeles Times
Los Angeles Times
Sport
Chuck Schilken

Dick Vitale has cancer for a third time. 84-year-old still plans to call ESPN games.

Dick Vitale has twice defeated cancer.

And at age 84, the beloved ESPN college basketball analyst fully intends to do it again.

Vitale revealed Wednesday that he has vocal cord cancer and will need six weeks of radiation as treatment.

"Though I was disappointed with the pathology report, I plan on winning this battle like I did vs Melanoma & Lymphoma !" Vitale tweeted Wednesday.

Vitale called the first college basketball game broadcast on ESPN in 1979 (DePaul 90, Wisconsin 77) and has been with the network ever since, delivering one catch phrase after another and using his unmistakable voice to exude unbridled enthusiasm for the game.

Now that voice is ailing. But the man known to fans as Dickie V said his doctor gave him some excellent news, telling him that the cancer "has an extremely high cure rate."

And there was more.

"I plan to fight like hell to be ready to call games when the college hoops season tips off in the Fall," Vitale wrote. "Dr. Z feels that scenario is entirely possible."

In November 2021, while Vitale was being treated for lymphoma and just months after overcoming melanoma, he returned to work to call ESPN's broadcast of No. 1 Gonzaga against No. 2 UCLA, a rematch of a Final Four thriller from April of that year.

It was just what the doctor ordered, Vitale told The Los Angeles Times days before the game.

"It's great medicine, right? And that's how the doctors feel too," said Vitale, who announced he was cancer free in April 2022. "They told me, 'All the tests about how you are — your EKG, your heart, your organs, they're all great, so there's no reason why you cannot go on and live your life, be active and let us worry about chemo and let us worry about the cancer. You do what you normally do at 82 — enjoy yourself.' "

At the 1993 ESPYs, Vitale helped former North Carolina State coach Jim Valvano, who was weakened by cancer, to the stage to give his famous "Don't give up" speech. Valvano died less than two months later.

Last year, Vitale was honored at the ESPYs with the Jimmy V Award for Perseverance. A longtime fundraiser for cancer research, Vitale announced his current diagnosis Wednesday, the day of this year's ESPYs ceremony at Hollywood's Dolby Theatre.

"This time last year, I was on the ESPYS stage, asking everyone to help in the cancer fight," he wrote. "This terrible disease strikes so many of our loved ones, and it's now knocked on my door three different times. More research will continue to help in this fight."

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