The New Zealand Herald

Hadlee faces more surgery

Secondary cancer in liver believed to be in early stages

- Andrew Alderson

Sir Richard Hadlee will have further surgery this week after secondary cancer was discovered in his liver. His wife, Lady Dianne, said the advice from doctors was that the disease was in its early stages and was operable.

The original tumour was discovered when the former cricket allrounder had a routine, three-year colonoscop­y in May.

He had it removed, and had been doing a chemothera­py course expected to last a few months.

Lady Dianne said: “We disclose these details solely in the interests of transparen­cy, and to avoid speculatio­n and gossip.

“We would again ask that people respect our request for privacy.”

The Herald spoke to a specialist who said the chances of a full recovery were high if the secondary cancer was detected early, there were a relatively limited number of growths and the strain of the disease was not overly aggressive.

After standard operations to treat bowel cancer, growths could recur in the liver, lungs or abdominal cavity.

Hadlee has previously been diagnosed with Wolff-ParkinsonW­hite Syndrome, a disorder which caused his heart to beat irregularl­y and required surgery to fix.

The 67-year-old’s cricketing greatness is easily defined.

He secured a world record 431 test wickets by retirement, was the linchpin in New Zealand’s golden era of the 1980s and sported a knighthood in his final test.

Few cricket players have carried as much responsibi­lity within an internatio­nal team.

During a 17-year test career, he became the world test-wicket record holder against India at Bangalore in 1988. He overtook Ian Botham’s 373-wicket mark when Chris Kuggeleijn caught India’s Arun Lal in the slips. Hadlee took a wicket with his final ball in a test against England at Edgbaston in 1990, with the scorecard listing him as “Sir Richard”.

His bowling average of 22.29 from 86 tests is among the best. Hadlee also scored 3124 test runs at an average of 27.16.

He received the supreme Halberg award twice and was honoured as the sportspers­on of the 1980s.

Hadlee shared his method for dealing with pressure to the Herald before the 2015 World Cup. He prescribed embracing any added attention as expectatio­ns mount.

“[It’s] a huge compliment to what you do on the field but it also carries responsibi­lity when you’re in the public domain.”

Conversely, Hadlee said privacy was warranted at home.

“You should be able to do your own thing without worrying about cameras out front Hollywood-style.

“However, when you’re out on the road you are public property, so come to terms with it.”

 ?? Photo / Getty Images ?? Sir Richard Hadlee has been having chemothera­py.
Photo / Getty Images Sir Richard Hadlee has been having chemothera­py.

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