express gazette logo
The Express Gazette
Wednesday, February 25, 2026

Baseball Broadcaster Ed Randall Uses Platform to Promote Prostate Cancer Awareness

Longtime MLB broadcaster ed Randall channels his own fight into a health advocacy campaign encouraging PSA testing for men over 40 through Fans For The Cure

Health 5 months ago
Baseball Broadcaster Ed Randall Uses Platform to Promote Prostate Cancer Awareness

Prostate cancer remains a major health concern for men, with the American Cancer Society estimating that in 2025 more than 300,000 men will be diagnosed and more than 35,000 will die from the disease. In response, longtime baseball broadcaster Ed Randall is turning his personal battle into a public health campaign, using his platform to raise awareness and advocate PSA testing through Fans For The Cure, the charity he founded in 2003.

Randall says he felt fine during a routine annual physical at age 47 when doctors delivered the diagnosis. There was no warning, he recalls. The revelation changed his mission. The veteran broadcaster co-hosts Remember When on MLB Network Radio on SiriusXM and uses every show to urge men to get a PSA blood test. "There’s a 99 percent cure rate if prostate cancer is detected early," Randall says.

Randall founded Fans For The Cure to encourage men over 40 to seek a PSA blood test, a simple step that can flag cancer early when treatment options are most effective. The organization’s work includes hosting awareness nights, free screenings at stadiums and other sports venues, plus community health events, patient advocacy, physician referrals and men’s and women’s support groups. information is available at fansforthecure.org.

Beyond his personal story, Randall’s outreach is part of a broader public health push to normalize conversations about prostate cancer screening. Fans For The Cure emphasizes that PSA testing should be discussed with a physician as part of an individual risk assessment, particularly for men over 40 who are often tuned in to sports broadcasts and may not routinely engage with health screenings. The charity’s approach aligns with efforts to reduce delays in diagnosis by lowering barriers to testing and expanding access to free or low-cost screenings at public venues.

The numbers driving attention to this issue remain sobering. The American Cancer Society projects hundreds of thousands of diagnoses nationwide each year, underscoring the need for awareness campaigns that reach men in everyday settings. Randall’s programing and charity work aim to reach the demographic most vulnerable to late-stage detection, leveraging sports culture to promote a straightforward medical step that can save lives.

Fans For The Cure’s ongoing outreach includes partnerships with medical providers to facilitate referrals, as well as support groups for individuals affected by prostate cancer. The organization’s dual focus on awareness and access reflects a broader shift toward community-based health initiatives that meet people where they are, both physically and culturally. For men who may be hesitant about screening, Randall’s message emphasizes that early detection improves outcomes and that PSA testing is a routine, low-cost option that can prompt timely treatment when necessary.

As health officials continue to encourage proactive testing, the story of Ed Randall serves as a reminder that personal experiences can catalyze lasting public health impact. By normalizing PSA testing and providing practical resources through Fans For The Cure, the effort seeks to reduce the burden of prostate cancer and improve survival through early detection.


Sources