Mel Stottlemyre has rallied again against illness, as he has so many times since being diagnosed with cancer in 1999.
“He’s doing much better," Stottlemyre’s wife, Jean, said by phone on Saturday. “We saw a big turnaround with Mel over the last 24 hours. He’s not in a life-threatening situation right now.”
Stottlemyre, the pitching coach for Joe Torre-era Yankees and the 1986 Mets, as well as a three-time 20-game winner for the Bronx Bombers, was admitted to a Seattle-area hospital on Wednesday due to what his wife said was a “bad reaction to his chemotherapy medicine.”
Fears were raised publicly when Stottlemyre’s son, Todd, himself a former major-league pitcher, on Friday wrote on Facebook that his dad was “fighting for his life" in the hospital.
“He’s doing much better," Stottlemyre’s wife, Jean, said by phone on Saturday. “We saw a big turnaround with Mel over the last 24 hours. He’s not in a life-threatening situation right now.”
Stottlemyre, the pitching coach for Joe Torre-era Yankees and the 1986 Mets, as well as a three-time 20-game winner for the Bronx Bombers, was admitted to a Seattle-area hospital on Wednesday due to what his wife said was a “bad reaction to his chemotherapy medicine.”
Fears were raised publicly when Stottlemyre’s son, Todd, himself a former major-league pitcher, on Friday wrote on Facebook that his dad was “fighting for his life" in the hospital.