Surgery Hoge injured his shoulder in an automobile accident in June 2002 and had an operation to repair a torn ligament. During an examination six months after surgery, Hoge told his doctor, Jim Bradley, also the Steelers' team physician, about a recurring back pain. Bradley began ordering tests to determine the cause. On February 14, 2003, Hoge was diagnosed with stage II
Non-Hodgkin lymphoma. He had the first of six
chemotherapy treatments on February 28. Soon after treatment began, Stanley Marks, Hoge's oncologist at the
University of Pittsburgh Medical Center, gave him a 75-80% chance of prolonged remission.
Family Hoge lives in
Fort Thomas, Kentucky with his son Beau (born 1997) and daughter Kori (born 1993). Fort Thomas is a suburb of
Campbell County, Kentucky, across the river from
Cincinnati, Ohio. Fellow retired NFL player,
Cris Collinsworth, also calls Fort Thomas home. When Hoge was playing for the
Pittsburgh Steelers, his wife Toni, who had previously resided there, did not want to live in
Pittsburgh. Accordingly, he deferred to her choice and Fort Thomas became their home. Toni and Merril are now divorced. Beau was a quarterback and running back for
Brigham Young University from 2015 to 2018. Hoge's nephew,
Tristen Hoge, was a rookie offensive lineman for the
New York Jets practice squad after being undrafted in 2021. His mother died when he was 19. ==Philanthropy==