Former Republic of Ireland defender and assistant manager Chris Hughton has revealed he was diagnosed with prostate cancer last year.
The 67-year-old, who played for Tottenham, West Ham, Brentford and Ireland before moving into coaching, underwent surgery last May.
He told the Daily Mail: “I had very good advice and all the treatment options were given to me, and I decided to have my prostate removed. The recovery has gone really well.
“I’m one year post-operation and I feel good. It’s all gone very well. I’ve got a lot of energy.
“Keeping active and busy is part of how I am anyway, but it’s also about rehabilitation and keeping your mind active as well.
“I’m very comfortable with my prognosis and my post-operation feelings. I’m in a really good place.”
Hughton, who won the FA Cup and the UEFA Cup with Spurs, also managed Brighton, Newcastle, Birmingham, Norwich, Nottingham Forest and, most recently, Ghana.
He was Brian Kerr’s Ireland No 2 between 2003 and 2005.
One in eight men will be affected by prostate cancer, and that risk doubles in black men.
Hughton added: “Mine is a good story and if it can help anybody, particularly in the black community, where we know that the percentages are a lot higher, then I’d be really happy.”