Terry Ryan had planned to spend Tuesday flying to Fort Myers, Fla., for spring training. Instead, he will spend the day on an operating table at the Mayo Clinic, having some lymph nodes — and a cancerous lump that developed in his neck last month — removed.
The Twins general manager was diagnosed with squamous cell cancer last week, the team announced Monday, and he will not attend the start, or perhaps any, of camp in Florida this year. After the lump is extracted, the 60-year-old Ryan likely will require radiation treatments to eradicate any lingering cancer cells and prevent a recurrence.
"There was cancer nowhere else, and that's very good news," said Dr. Vijay Eyunni, the Twins team physician. "The prognosis at this point [is], we're very optimistic" that it will be completely cured, though it's too early to predict when he might be healthy enough to return to work.
Assistant GM Rob Antony will take charge of the team while Ryan is away, making decisions about the roster and transactions with input from longtime director of player personnel Mike Radcliff and manager Ron Gardenhire, as well as the on-field and front-office staffs.
"I started asking him questions — how do you want me to handle this or that?" Antony said of a meeting Thursday, when Ryan revealed his condition. "He just looked at me and basically said, 'You've been around here long enough. You've been in all these meetings. Just go down and do your thing. You know what you're doing.' It felt good that he had that kind of confidence in me."
Ryan also has confidence, which his doctors share, that the cancer can be dealt with permanently. Late last month during a routine annual physical, he asked Eyunni to examine a lump, an inch in diameter and unusually hard, that had appeared a few weeks earlier. After ruling out a cyst, Eyunni conducted a biopsy, which found the lump to be cancerous. Further examination could find no source for the cancer, however, nor any more cancerous cells in any other part of his body.
Surgery upcoming
The normal treatment, particularly when found early as in this case, is to surgically remove the affected cells and use radiation to eradicate the disease. Ryan checked into Mayo Clinic in Rochester on Monday, conferred with specialists and, Eyunni said, probably would undergo surgery Tuesday. He likely will remain hospitalized for two or three days before returning to his Eagan home.
"He wanted to hit it head-on, then move on," Eyunni said. " 'Let's get this taken care of right away, as usual. You know how he talks.' ''