\n","providerName":"Twitter","providerUrl":"https://twitter.com","thumbnail_url":null,"type":"oembed","width":550,"contentType":"rich"},{"__typename":"Markdown","content":"“Trey’s road to recovery has begun, starting with some light squats,” Perlman tweeted. “No dumbbells necessary.”\n\nCradling Olympia, a barefooted Mancini does a round of squats on a hardwood floor. At one point, he turns Olympia around to face the camera.\n\n“He’s like a 10-pound dumbbell,” Mancini jokes in the video. “That’s a good start for me.”\n\nHaving undergone surgery to remove a malignant tumor from his colon on March 12, Mancini was diagnosed with Stage 3 colon cancer several days later, after doctors found evidence that the disease had spread to three lymph nodes. He was prescribed six months of chemotherapy treatment, which he began at a Baltimore hospital in April.\n\nMancini revealed his condition in a first-person essay in The Players Tribune on April 28, speaking at length with reporters about it a day later. He said he had begun jogging and doing light workouts to maintain his weight during treatment.\n\nThe Orioles and Mancini are both optimistic that he will make a full recovery, but they expect him to miss the entire 2020 season if it resumes.","type":"text"}],"relativeSiteUrl":"/news/trey-mancini-working-out-with-new-puppy","contentType":"news","subHeadline":null,"summary":"Despite undergoing treatment for Stage 3 colon cancer and quarantining due to the coronavirus pandemic, Trey Mancini is still finding ways to get his workouts in. And he’s doing it with a smile.\nMancini was grinning from ear-to-ear in a homemade video posted to Twitter late Monday night that showed","tagline({\"formatString\":\"none\"})":null,"tags":[{"__typename":"InternalTag","slug":"season-2020","title":"Season 2020","type":"season"},{"__typename":"InternalTag","slug":"storytype-article","title":"Article","type":"article"},{"__typename":"TeamTag","slug":"teamid-110","title":"Baltimore Orioles","team":{"__ref":"Team:110"},"type":"team"},{"__typename":"ContributorTag","slug":"joe-trezza","title":"Joe Trezza","type":"contributor"},{"__typename":"PersonTag","slug":"playerid-641820","title":"Trey Mancini","person":{"__ref":"Person:641820"},"type":"player"}],"type":"story","thumbnail":"https://img.mlbstatic.com/mlb-images/image/private/{formatInstructions}/mlb/rzgxtyl6a8dgyyacuvqv","title":"Trey Mancini working out with new puppy"}},"Team:110":{"__typename":"Team","id":110},"Person:641820":{"__typename":"Person","id":641820}}}
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Despite undergoing treatment for Stage 3 colon cancer and quarantining due to the coronavirus pandemic, Trey Mancini is still finding ways to get his workouts in. And he’s doing it with a smile.
Mancini was grinning from ear-to-ear in a homemade video posted to Twitter late Monday night that showed the O’s star squatting with a special friend in his arms: a puppy he and his girlfriend recently adopted named “Olympia.”
The video was posted by Mancini’s girlfriend and former MASN sideline reporter Sara Perlman, who now co-hosts “The Daily Line” on NBC Sports.
Trey’s road to recovery has begun, starting with some light squats. No dumbbells necessary pic.twitter.com/tU9Z5heBQB
“Trey’s road to recovery has begun, starting with some light squats,” Perlman tweeted. “No dumbbells necessary.”
Cradling Olympia, a barefooted Mancini does a round of squats on a hardwood floor. At one point, he turns Olympia around to face the camera.
“He’s like a 10-pound dumbbell,” Mancini jokes in the video. “That’s a good start for me.”
Having undergone surgery to remove a malignant tumor from his colon on March 12, Mancini was diagnosed with Stage 3 colon cancer several days later, after doctors found evidence that the disease had spread to three lymph nodes. He was prescribed six months of chemotherapy treatment, which he began at a Baltimore hospital in April.
Mancini revealed his condition in a first-person essay in The Players Tribune on April 28, speaking at length with reporters about it a day later. He said he had begun jogging and doing light workouts to maintain his weight during treatment.
The Orioles and Mancini are both optimistic that he will make a full recovery, but they expect him to miss the entire 2020 season if it resumes.