Awesome stuff. Boggs spent the majority of his 18-year MLB career with the Boston Red Sox. He was a 12-time All-Star, an eight-time Silver Slugger, a five-time AL batting champion ...
Baseball Hall of Famer and former Yankees infielder Wade Boggs can now proudly “ring the bell.” Boggs posted to his X account on Friday that he is officially cancer free, thanking his doctors ...
After being diagnosed with prostate cancer last year, Baseball Hall of Famer Wade Boggs posted a video of him ringing the bell for cancer survivors on Monday. Boggs, 66, posted he was cancer-free ...
“An extremely emotional day,” Boggs wrote. “I can’t thank my doctor’s Dr. Engleman and Dr. Heidenberg enough also to everyone for your thoughts and prayers Debbie and I are pleased to ...
Wade Boggs, the legendary MLB third baseman and Baseball Hall of Famer, posted a video of him ringing the bell after defeating prostate cancer. Boggs, 66, shared the video in a post to X on Monday.
Congratulations are in order for Baseball Hall of Famer Wade Boggs, who announced on Friday that he is cancer-free. We learned in September that he was battling prostate cancer. An extremely ...
Wade Boggs is cancer free. The Hall of Fame third baseman made the announcement on social media Friday, five months after he revealed that he had prostate cancer. "An extremely emotional day I can ...
Wade Boggs says he is cancer-free. Boggs, 66, announced the “extremely emotional” news Friday in a post on X. “An extremely emotional day I can’t thank my doctors Dr. Engleman and Dr ...
Former MLB third baseman Wade Boggs is cancer-free. The 66-year-old posted a video on X of himself ringing the bell in celebration of beating prostate cancer. “Smoke On the Water” by Deep ...
Boggs played 18 years in the big leagues, including 11 with the Boston Red Sox. He compiled more then 3,000 hits in his career, winning five batting titles and making 12 All-Star teams along the way.
Five months after being diagnosed with prostate cancer, Wade Boggs is now cancer free. "An extremely emotional day," the former Red Sox third baseman posted on X (formerly Twitter) back on Feb. 7.