Curt Schilling was part of two world championship Boston Red Sox teams, in addition to one with the Arizona Diamondbacks.

Story highlights

Schilling says he's "recently been diagnosed" with an unspecified cancer

"I'll embrace this fight just like the rest of them," he says

Schilling was on three world championship teams during his 20-year MLB career

He now works as an ESPN analyst

CNN  — 

Curt Schilling – a standout pitcher who belonged to three World Series championship teams before becoming an ESPN analyst – has cancer, he announced Wednesday.

The retired Major League Baseball player did not specify what type of cancer he had or his prognosis, only that “I’ve recently been diagnosed.”

“I’ve always believed life is about embracing the gifts and rising up to meet the challenges,” Schilling, 47, said in a statement. “… I’ve been so very blessed and I feel grateful for what God has allowed my family to have and experience, and I’ll embrace this fight just like the rest of them, with resolute faith and head on.”

After rising up the Boston Red Sox minor league ranks, Schilling broke into the Major Leagues with Baltimore in 1988. He went on to star with the Philadelphia Phillies before ascending another level in his career upon joining the Arizona Diamondbacks in 2001.

That season, Schilling not only posted a 22-6 record and an ERA of 2.98, but he earned World Series MVP honors in leading the team to its first-ever championship.

He maintained the momentum the following season, when – for the second straight year – Major League players voted him as the National League’s most outstanding pitcher.

Schilling went on to obtain legendary status in Boston upon returning to the Red Sox via trade before the 2004 season. The right-handed starter posted impressive numbers during the regular season, then didn’t let an injury – that left him with a famously bloody sock – stop him from contributing to Boston’s first World Series title in 86 years.

He retired in 2007, after the Red Sox again won the title, then led an ill-fated video game company based in Rhode Island.

ESPN would later hire him as a baseball analyst. The network issued a statement Wednesday saying, “His ESPN teammates wish him continued strength in his cancer fight, and we look forward to welcoming him back to our baseball coverage whenever he’s ready.”

This isn’t the Schilling family’s first brush with cancer. His wife, Shonda, went public – even inviting cameras in to capture her fifth and final surgery – in the early 2000s with her fight with malignant melanoma.

She afterward created the Shade Foundation of America, a group geared toward educating children about skin cancer and prevention.