SPORTS MEDIA
Jeanne Zelasko overcomes string of misfortune
Since August, the Fox sportscaster has survived a cancer scare, the death of her father and other ordeals that would overwhelm most, but the strength of family has helped her endure.
Sportscaster Jeanne Zelasko is back in the Fox studio, anchoring the network's Saturday baseball coverage after a string of off-season misfortune.
It actually began in August, though, when her father, Stanley, died of a heart attack at 71 in his home in Escondido.
The shock of losing her father, Zelasko said, led to another shock -- learning in December that she had thyroid cancer. She recounted what she sees as a strange turn of events.
"My father died on my son Trevor's first day of kindergarten," said Zelasko, 41, who was so concerned with her son that she ignored the constant ringing of her cellphone.
"When I finally did answer it, it was my brother telling me what happened," she said of finding out about her dad. "I screamed, the kind of scream that comes from your gut, and blew out my voice."
Despite her hoarse voice, she was able to work the playoffs and World Series. It went largely unnoticed, perhaps because she has a bit of a gravelly voice anyway.
When the season ended, though, she had her voice problem checked out by a throat specialist. She recalled the doctor telling her she had a polyp and wanted to operate immediately. But Zelasko put off the surgery because of a couple of college football assignments she had been given at the end of last year.
Then, during a routine medical checkup, she mentioned her problem. Soon she was in the hands of Dr. Robert Andrews, a throat surgeon at St. John's Health Center, who said there "was no polyp . . . just an abrasion," recalled Zelasko. Andrews did discover, however, that Zelasko had thyroid cancer.
He operated on her Jan. 11 and in mid-February Zelasko underwent a one-shot, heavy-duty iodine radiation treatment to ensure the cancer would be zapped.
"I was in quarantine for 48 hours," she said. "They say radiation, compared to chemo, is the lesser of two evils. But I felt like they had taken a blow torch to me. It really knocked me for a loop."
She told her husband, Channel 7 sportscaster Curt Sandoval, "I only have 1% of me left. The kids get 75% of that 1%, I get 20% and all you get is 5%."
Of her husband of 10 years, Zelasko said, "He's been great. And he had to forgo running in his first Boston Marathon. He just wasn't able to get in the training he needed."
Sandoval, who qualified for Boston by running a marathon in Tucson a year ago in 3 hours 18 minutes, decided that there will be other Boston Marathons. He recalled how he had been scheduled to participate in an organized run in Pasadena in February as part of his training but chose to stay home. And it was a good thing.
"Jeannie couldn't even get out of bed and Trevor was off playing by himself," Sandoval said.
Zelasko is doing fine now.
"I'm considered cancer free," she said, although she has to undergo checkups every three months.
However, the story of her off-season troubles doesn't end here.
On Dec. 22, four days after she learned about the cancer, Zelasko's 42-year-old sister Terri came down with the worst headache she said she had ever had.
"Terri told me later that she had watched enough doctor shows on television, including 'House,' to know that she might have a brain aneurysm," Zelasko said. "And that's what it was.
"It burst, but fortunately she had gone to a hospital in time."
It actually began in August, though, when her father, Stanley, died of a heart attack at 71 in his home in Escondido.
"My father died on my son Trevor's first day of kindergarten," said Zelasko, 41, who was so concerned with her son that she ignored the constant ringing of her cellphone.
"When I finally did answer it, it was my brother telling me what happened," she said of finding out about her dad. "I screamed, the kind of scream that comes from your gut, and blew out my voice."
Despite her hoarse voice, she was able to work the playoffs and World Series. It went largely unnoticed, perhaps because she has a bit of a gravelly voice anyway.
When the season ended, though, she had her voice problem checked out by a throat specialist. She recalled the doctor telling her she had a polyp and wanted to operate immediately. But Zelasko put off the surgery because of a couple of college football assignments she had been given at the end of last year.
Then, during a routine medical checkup, she mentioned her problem. Soon she was in the hands of Dr. Robert Andrews, a throat surgeon at St. John's Health Center, who said there "was no polyp . . . just an abrasion," recalled Zelasko. Andrews did discover, however, that Zelasko had thyroid cancer.
He operated on her Jan. 11 and in mid-February Zelasko underwent a one-shot, heavy-duty iodine radiation treatment to ensure the cancer would be zapped.
"I was in quarantine for 48 hours," she said. "They say radiation, compared to chemo, is the lesser of two evils. But I felt like they had taken a blow torch to me. It really knocked me for a loop."
She told her husband, Channel 7 sportscaster Curt Sandoval, "I only have 1% of me left. The kids get 75% of that 1%, I get 20% and all you get is 5%."
Of her husband of 10 years, Zelasko said, "He's been great. And he had to forgo running in his first Boston Marathon. He just wasn't able to get in the training he needed."
Sandoval, who qualified for Boston by running a marathon in Tucson a year ago in 3 hours 18 minutes, decided that there will be other Boston Marathons. He recalled how he had been scheduled to participate in an organized run in Pasadena in February as part of his training but chose to stay home. And it was a good thing.
"Jeannie couldn't even get out of bed and Trevor was off playing by himself," Sandoval said.
Zelasko is doing fine now.
"I'm considered cancer free," she said, although she has to undergo checkups every three months.
However, the story of her off-season troubles doesn't end here.
On Dec. 22, four days after she learned about the cancer, Zelasko's 42-year-old sister Terri came down with the worst headache she said she had ever had.
"Terri told me later that she had watched enough doctor shows on television, including 'House,' to know that she might have a brain aneurysm," Zelasko said. "And that's what it was.
"It burst, but fortunately she had gone to a hospital in time."
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