MLB

Red Sox Hall of Famer Mike Lowell shares that he’s 22 years cancer free

"All those that helped me in my treatment forever hold a special place in my heart."

Mike Lowell warms up before a Red Sox alumni baseball game. Michael Dwyer/AP Photo

Mike Lowell, who overcame testicular cancer in 1999, shared Friday that he’s now 22 years cancer free.

“Seems like yesterday sometimes and a lifetime ago at other times,” the former Red Sox third baseman wrote. “All those that helped me in my treatment forever hold a special place in my heart.”

He also wished health to all players this upcoming Major League Baseball season.

Lowell feared cancer had returned in 2005, but tests revealed a mass was not a tumor or cancerous. Rather, it was a benign condition of the bone, something he had since he was 4 years old, according to the Tampa Bay Times.

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“We just started jumping up and down like I had won the lottery,” Lowell said at the time. “Everyone was crying.”

Lowell, who played with the Red Sox from 2006-2010 and was an All-Star and World Series MVP in 2007, is a member of the Red Sox Hall of Fame.

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Trevor Hass is a sports producer for Boston.com, where he writes and edits stories about Boston's professional teams, among other tasks.

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