Randy Moss and his wife, Lydia, are opening up about how they navigated the Pro Football Hall of Famer’s battle with Stage 2 bile duct cancer.
Speaking with “Good Morning America’s” Robin Roberts in an interview that aired Thursday, Moss — set to return to his ESPN “Sunday NFL Countdown” duties this weekend after stepping away late last year to focus on his health — relied on his spouse for support, albeit begrudgingly, according to Lydia.
“It was hard for me, because he didn’t want our help, because he’s used to doing everything on his own. And as much as he tried to push us away, I think he realized we needed him and he needed us,” she said.
“… I was kicking down them doors. I was opening up those blinds. I was like, ‘Even if I just have to sit here, I’m just gonna sit here. Even if you angry, even if you don’t wanna talk, we gonna be here.’”
Moss, 48, ignited chatter about his health in December when he asked for prayers and shared he was “battling something internally.”
Upon stepping away from ESPN that same month, the legendary NFL wideout posted an Instagram video a short time later and revealed he’s a “cancer survivor.”
“I just think that when you live your life, you know, a certain type of way of, you know, eating right, taking care of your health, and all of a sudden you get diagnosed with cancer … I was overwhelmed,” Moss told Roberts of the initial shock of his cancer diagnosis, in which he grappled with symptoms such as yellow eyes from jaundice and dark-colored urine, per GMA.
Moss, who has been part of ESPN since 2016, underwent a six-hour procedure after doctors discovered cancer “in the bowel duct, right in between the pancreas and the liver.”
“I am forever grateful,” Moss said in the Instagram video posted in December
Two months later, Moss made an emotional return to ESPN as part of the network’s Super Bowl 2025 coverage, where he was reduced to tears following a star-studded welcome-back video featuring Tom Brady and Justin Jefferson, among others.
“Y’all already know it’s the big crybaby here,” Moss, 48, said in February.
“I can’t do it alone and I really thank y’all. … It’s been hard, but I’ve got a lot of love and a lot of people believing in me, man. So I’m happy to be here.”
ESPN confirmed in July that Moss would return to “Sunday NFL Countdown” in the fall, joining colleagues Rex Ryan, Alex Smith, Tedy Bruschi and Mike Greenberg.
“Randy’s return on Super Bowl Sunday was an emotional lift — not just for our team but for the entire football community — and knowing he will resume his full ‘Sunday NFL Countdown’ schedule, beginning in Week 1, has been the highlight of the offseason,” the network said.
A four-time First-Team All-Pro, Moss spent 14 seasons in the league. He is largely known for his runs with the Patriots and the Vikings, who drafted him 21st overall in 1998.
Source link