NFL
Terry Bradshaw reveals how his life changed after cancer diagnosis – ‘If I die, everything will be different…’ SEE MORE 👇

Terry Bradshaw admits his life changed in four ways after cancer – ‘In case I die’
NFL icon Terry Bradshaw, who was diagnosed with bladder cancer in 2021 and a rare form of skin cancer a few months later, says he has a new outlook on life
Terry Bradshaw has opened up about his transformation since his double cancer scare.
The Pittsburgh Steelers legend, 76, battled bladder cancer in November 2021 before being diagnosed with a rare and severe form of skin cancer on his neck a few months later. Bradshaw chose to reveal his condition publicly after viewers noted his shortness of breath during a FOX NFL Sunday broadcast in September 2022.
Bradshaw believes that facing his mortality has shifted his perspective significantly. Speaking to AARP, he reflected: “I’m a milder guy, I think, more involved with the kids. I think I’m a better husband.
“I am travelling more now. Maybe quietly, subconsciously, I’m thinking, ‘I need to travel more in case I die’. Going to Scotland, going to Ireland, going to France. I’ve been to Canada, I’m going to Alaska. So maybe that’s the impact right there.”
Despite the severity of his diagnoses, Bradshaw claims he never feared death and faced his treatment head-on before being given a clean bill of health.
He said: “I’m kind of a fearless guy, to a fault. The two bouts of cancer… I never thought I was going to die. It never crossed my mind. I wasn’t even nervous.”
Terry Bradshaw speaks onstage during Fred Minnick Live 2025 at New Orleans Marriott Warehouse Arts District
Bradshaw insists he never thought he was going to die (
Image:
Peter G. Forest/Getty Images)
Anxiety, however, crept in while waiting for follow-up results. He added: “For the follow-ups, I was nervous, ‘You’re cancer-free, we’ll see you in 90s days’. Blood work, PET scans, waiting three days later [for the results], then the phone rings and your wife goes, ‘Good news, you’re cancer-free,’ and you’re like, ‘Phew’.
On his decision to keep the diagnosis private, he told TODAY last year: “I didn’t talk about it because I didn’t want pity