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Legendary announcer Dick Vitale said he is cancer free, ready to call games for ESPN again

COLLEGE BASKETBALL: MAR 12 SEC Tournament - Texas A&M v Arkansas TAMPA, FL - MARCH 12: College basketball legend Dick Vitale is featuring before the SEC Tournament between the Texas A&M Aggies and the Arkansas Razorbacks on Thursday, March 11, 2022 at the Amalie Arena in Tampa, FL (Photo by Peter Joneleit/Icon Sportswire via Getty Images) (Icon Sportswire/Icon Sportswire via Getty Images)

After numerous cancer battles, legendary ESPN announcer Dick Vitale is nearly ready to return to the network and call a college basketball game once again.

Vitale announced on social media on Wednesday that his vocal cords are cancer free. He said his doctor now feels he “can return to my love of being at courtside for ESPN.”

This cancer battle was just the latest that Vitale has gone through in recent years. He was first diagnosed with melanoma in 2021, and then with lymphoma a few months later. He then announced in July 2023 that he had been diagnosed with vocal cord cancer, which he overcame a few months later. But then last summer, Vitale announced that he had been diagnosed with cancer a fourth time in his lymph nodes. He's been recovering from that ever since, and he underwent surgery to remove cancerous lymph nodes in July.

Vitale has largely been away from ESPN amid his fights with cancer, but he returned briefly in 2021 to an incredibly emotional moment at a game in Las Vegas.

Vitale has been at ESPN almost since the beginning, and has been a staple in the sport for decades. He called the very first basketball game for the network after it launched, and he was inducted into the Naismith Memorial Basketball Hall of Fame in 2008.

"It will take more time before I get the strength back in my voice," he <a data-i13n="cpos:5;pos:1" href="https://sports.yahoo.com/legendary-espn-announcer-dick-vitale-recovering-after-latest-cancer-surgery-185008252.html"><ins>said last year</ins></a>. "The 35 radiation treatments I had for my vocal cord cancer wiped out the cancer but created some problems to my vocal cords. … I miss so much the entire college spirit at the games as I always love being able to share time with the players, coaches, fans, media and especially my ESPN colleagues."

When Vitale will get to make his return to the broadcast booth is still unclear. Though if Vitale is ready and willing, expect ESPN to move quickly in getting him back on the call.

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