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Martina Navratilova says she is now ‘cancer-free’ after overcoming breast and throat cancer.
The tennis legend revealed the good news in an emotional interview with Piers Morgan, adding she had feared she ‘wouldn’t see next Christmas’.
The 66-year-old said the diagnosis had forced her to put on hold plans to adopt a child with her wife Julia Lemigova and even drew up a bucket list of things she wanted to do before she dies.
In an interview on Morgan’s TalkTV show, which will air tomorrow, Navratilova said the double diagnosis had terrified her, but confirmed that ‘as far as they know I’m cancer-free’.
She added that she only has two more weeks of radiation treatment radiotherapy on her breast and that after this ‘I should be good to go’.
The tennis legend confirmed she has beaten breast and throat cancer in an interview with Piers Morgan (pictured together)
The 66-year-old, pictured here holding the Wimbledon trophy in 1990, received the double diagnosis in December
In an emotional interview Navratilova revealed she feared she would not see the next Christmas
The tennis ace, who won 59 major titles in a career spanning four decades, announced she had been diagnosed with cancer at the start of the year, sparking an avalanche of support.
She had previously beaten breast cancer in 2010, but said she feared she might not see Christmas 2023 after it returned.
Navratilova confirmed she was diagnosed after doctors found an enlarged lymph node in her neck during the WTA finals in Fort Worth in November, with tests later confirming she had both breast and throat cancer.
After being diagnosed at the beginning of last December, she said: ‘[I’m thinking] I will see this Christmas but maybe not the next one.’
She added: ‘Who has two cancers at the same time? I was never an underachiever, but this is getting ridiculous.’
However, displaying the spirit that guided her to success on the tennis court, Navratilova defiantly said: ‘Giving up, giving in, stopping – that’s just not an option for me. You get on with it.’
She added: ‘Quitting is just not in my DNA.’
Fortunately, doctors informed Navratilova her cancer was ‘extremely treatable’, the Sun reports.
She said during the treatment, which took place while she wore a specially fitted mask, she was moved to tears as nurses played Elton John’s I’m Still Standing while she was in the hospital.
The singer had dedicated the song to the Czech-born athlete at a concert in Paris during the French Open in the 1980s.
Now a naturalised American, the tennis ace told Morgan she began writing her bucket list after the diagnosis.
She said: ‘This may sound really shallow, but I was like, okay, ‘Which kick ass car do I really want to drive if I live like a year?”
But now the tennis commentator will have more time than she had feared after beating the disease following a gruelling combination of chemotherapy, radiotherapy and proton therapy.
In the interview, which will feature a video of Navratilova ringing a bell at the hospital to signal she was in the all clear, Navratilova says it was the toughest thing she has ever done.
However, she added she told herself to ‘suck it up’ after seeing children as young as six months old being treated for cancer in the same clinic.
Navratilova, pictured here holding the Wimbledon winners plate, said the treatment was the toughest thing she had ever done
Navratilova, pictured with her wife and former Russian model, Julia Lemigova (left), has had a colourful life off the court
The athlete, pictured here at Wimbledon in 1990, said she wrote a bucket list after her most recent cancer diagnosis
During her playing career the Czech-born player dominated women’s tennis with Chris Evert (pictured together at Wimbledon in 1978)
Navratilova, pictured here with her wife Julia Lemigova, said she was overwhelmed with support after announcing her diagnosis
The news of the Wimbledon legend beating the disease will come as welcome news to fans, who overwhelmed her with support after announcing she was fighting cancer again.
Navratilova said she wasn’t ‘done yet’ after the diagnosis, adding: ‘I’m hoping for a favourable outcome. It’s going to stink for a while but I’ll fight with all I have got.’
In a statement released at the same time, her representative called the prognosis ‘good’ and that as they had been caught early treatment for them had ‘great outcomes’.
Navratilova’s outspoken defiance following her diagnosis has been a feature of her life both on and off the tennis court.
In the course of her more than 40-year career, she Prague-born athlete won 59 Grand Slam titles, including 31 in women’s doubles and 10 in mixed doubles.
She dominated women’s tennis in the 70s and 80s with Chris Evert – and the pair have been firm friends off court, with Evert supporting her through her recent treatment and Navratilova returning the favour as her rival battled ovarian cancer.
Her last win was at the 2006 US Open, when she won the mixed doubles with Bob Bryan just one month before turning 50 years old.
Navratilova had originally retired in 1994, but returned to play doubles and the occasional singles tournament in 2000 – the same year she was inducted into the International Tennis Hall of Fame.
Becoming a TV analyst in recent years, Navratilova was outspoken during her playing career with her political views and sexual orientation.
As an openly gay woman, she would have her romantic partners sit courtside at championship matches without anyone in the crowd necessarily knowing about it.
The tennis ace, pictured here raising the Wimbledon trophy in 1978, has often been outspoken during her career
The 59-time Grand Slam winner has been outspoken in recent years on trans athletes and during her career was one of the few openly-gay tennis players on the circuit
Navratilova, pictured here in 2019, said she told herself to stop complaining about her treatment after seeing children with cancer at the clinic
She was also vehemently criticized by LGBTQ+ advocates when she published an opinion piece in the Sunday Times of London in February 2019 against rules that would support transgender female athletes competing against other women, saying they would ‘reward cheats and punish the innocent.’
‘Clearly that can’t be right. You can’t just proclaim yourself a female and be able to compete against women,’ she also said in a 2019 tweet that’s now been deleted.
‘There must be some standards, and having a penis and competing as a woman would not fit that standard.’
The tennis legend has never been afraid to do things her own way, having forged her path to stardom by leaving Czechoslovakia when she was just 18 years old.
Since then she has gained American citizenship and married Russian model Julia Lemigova, with the couple having two daughters – Victoria, 21, and Emma, 17 – from Julia’s previous relationship.
Navratilova first met Julia more than 20 years ago in a Parisian gay bar, and tied the knot in 2015 after nine years together.
In 2012, Martina said motherhood had changed her life and she had cut down on her travelling to spend more time with her family.
Raising the sensitive issue of motherhood at the time, presenter Kirsty Young said that many high-profile gay couples have had children, before asking: ‘Would you have wanted to have children, or did that coincide with your grand slam years?’
Martina replied: ‘Pretty much, well those years are gone, I am well into the menopause now, so that ship has sailed!’
However, she added: ‘I never really got the opportunity to have a child, but I am in a relationship now with my partner and she has two girls, so I am a parent now.’
On motherhood, Martina said: ‘It’s difficult, two girls, but it’s fun, it’s amazing.’
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