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Dick Vitale, the 86-year-old ESPN analyst, has been diagnosed with melanoma, marking his fifth battle against cancer. He remains optimistic, having previously overcome melanoma, lymphoma, vocal cord cancer, and lymph node cancer.
Dick Vitale has brought unwavering energy to college basketball broadcasts for decades, and has promised to bring that same level of passion in his latest fight against cancer. The 86-year-old ESPN analyst has beaten cancer four previous times, but learned he will have to fight it once more after a recent biopsy.
"I've beaten melanoma. I've beaten lymphoma. I've beaten vocal cord cancer. I've beaten lymph node cancer," Vitale, 86, said in a statement. "I'm four-for-four and I'm fully confident I'm going to make it five-for-five."
Vitale was diagnosed with melanoma in his lung and liver cavity.
He returned to game telecasts down the stretch of the 2025-2026 college basketball season after taking a couple years off to focus on his health.
After four and a half decades at the mic, Vitale called his first NCAA tournament game this past March.
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This article originally appeared on College Sports Wire: Dick Vitale reveals new cancer diagnosis, vows to keep fighting
Dick Vitale has successfully battled melanoma, lymphoma, vocal cord cancer, and lymph node cancer.
Dick Vitale has been diagnosed with melanoma located in his lung and liver cavity.

Lampard celebrates Coventry's return to the Premier League after 25 years!
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