Photo: Momodu Mansaray/WireImage

Dick Vitaleaccepted the Jimmy V Award for Perseverance on Wednesday night at the2022 ESPY Awards.
Vitale spent much of his speech praising theJimmy V Foundation, which funds research into finding a cure for cancer.
“No kid or child should be going through chemo or radiation,” Vitale said.
“[Cancer] doesn’t discriminate, it comes after all,” he later added. “It doesn’t matter race or religion, it will bring you to your knees. There’s only one way to beat it, my friends, we have to raise dollars and give oncologists a fighting chance.”
Vitale ended his speech with a message to “keep chasing your dreams, keep chasing your goals.”
“Just remember: perseverance, plus passion, plus pride, equals ‘win’ in the game of life,” he continued.
According toESPN, the Jimmy V Award is given to a “deserving member of the sporting world who has overcome great obstacles through perseverance and determination.”
In October 2021, Vitale wrote an essay for ESPN’sFront Rowannouncing he had been diagnosed with lymphoma, a cancer of the lymphatic system. Two months prior, Vitale revealed he had been battling melanoma but had since been cleared of the skin disease.
Before his lymphoma diagnosis, doctors thought he might have bile duct cancer, which would have required far more intensive surgery, he told the outlet. However, they later determined that he had precancerous dysplasia in his throat, a growth on his vocal cords that could become cancerous if left untreated.
The diagnosis was devastating for the Hall of Fame broadcaster, particularly when his doctor said it could have been avoided if he had scheduled regular checkups.
Vitale, who spent over 40 years of his career on the ESPN airwaves as he commentated hundreds of basketball games for the network,was instructed to go three months without talking. He needed to save his vocal cords and prevent the growths from getting larger and said those months were some of the toughest of his life. He also had to undergo months of chemotherapy to fight the cancer.
On April 14, Vitaleshared on Twitterthat he was officially cancer-free as of his last chemotherapy appointment.
Dick Vitale.Ethan Miller/Getty

Vitale also expressed his gratitude when he was told he was this year’s recipient of the Jimmy V Award, named for the late Jim Valvano, his former broadcast partner at ESPN, whom he quoted in his tweet.
“When I received the call from [ESPN president] Jimmy Pitaro about receiving this award, I was absolutely blown away,” hesaid in a statement to ESPN.
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“I remember that day almost 30 years ago, when I stood on stage at the first ESPYS, introduced Jimmy V, and witnessed him give that incredible speech we all remember,” he added. “I reflected on his speech many times during my seven-month battle — ‘don’t give up, don’t ever give up Dickie V’ — and I remembered my mother and father, who taught me never to believe in ‘can’t’. Jimmy V was special and his legacy lives on. I am so grateful to receive this tremendous award in his honor.”
source: people.com