BOSTON (AP) – This is Jon Lester unleashed: unhittable in May, a stopper in October, the emerging ace of the Boston Red Sox.
The 24-year-old lefty will start Game 3 of the AL championship series against Tampa Bay on Monday, facing Matt Garza at Fenway Park under the championship banner Lester helped raise with a World Series-clinching victory just months after he was cured of cancer.
“We’re one of four teams left right now. You’re playing for the ultimate prize. You’re playing for another ring, a chance to be world champions again,” Lester said Sunday before Boston’s off-day workout. “I think a lot of the young guys that were here last year get spoiled. We’re doing it again. It’s almost like we expect it, and this is all we know.”
All Lester has known lately is success – especially at Fenway.
d Series as the Red Sox swept Colorado to win their second title in four seasons.
“He’s pitching unbelievable right now, and I think he’s become our ace,” Kevin Youkilis said. “Coming here at home he always pitches pretty well, so we’ve just got to have him pitch a good game and jump on Garza as soon as we can.”
The Red Sox took the opener of the best-of-seven series in Florida, but the Rays tied it Saturday night when B.J. Upton lofted a bases-loaded sacrifice fly to shallow right field in the 11th inning to give Tampa Bay a 9-8 victory. Josh Beckett, dominant in Boston’s ’07 title run, allowed eight runs in 4 1-3 innings, taxing the bullpen and leaving the Red Sox in need of a Game 3 rescue from Lester.
“He’s the guy you want to give the ball to,” Boston reliever Manny Delcarmen said. “With what he’s done, he’s the guy everybody feels comfortable in after a tough loss that he’s going to go out and throw well.”
A touted prospect who was routinely requested in trade talks, Lester was developing into a star when he was diagnosed with anaplastic large cell lymphoma, a rare cancer of the lymph nodes, as a rookie in 2006. He was pronounced cancer-free after chemotherapy in December and cleared to return to the mound in the spring of ’07.
ll strength. Their conclusion: take it slow.
“I made a call to his folks in spring training, and I told them, ‘We’re really going to (upset) your son.’ And they laughed,” Red Sox manager Terry Francona said. “They said, ‘You know, we understand why.’
“I think it was the correct thing to do. He was pitching fine, but it wasn’t what it is now. I don’t think you ever expect that, but when you’re competing you want it to be there – right now.”
The Red Sox started Lester in the minors last season before calling him up to Boston in late August. He went 4-0 with a 4.72 ERA in 11 starts over the last two months of the regular season, and when the playoffs began they sent him out to the bullpen as an emergency long-relief guy.
He did not appear in the first round against the Angels, and he came out of the bullpen in a pair of losses to Cleveland in the AL championship series. In the World Series, all he did was start the fourth game and pitch 5 2-3 shutout innings against the Rockies.
Lester agrees now that it was smart to take it slowly, but he also admits that it was frustrating to be held back when he wanted to be just another pitcher on the staff – not a recovering cancer patient.
strictions, I think I would have gotten hurt. I don’t think I was physically ready to do the workload that I wanted to do. I was happy in the end that they did it.”
Last winter, Lester had a normal offseason and came to spring training ready to take on a normal workload. He went 16-6 with a 3.21 ERA this year, with a 2.49 ERA at home and a 4.09 mark and 5-5 record on the road.
Most importantly, he did not miss a start, although the team did give him an extra-long break around the All-Star game.
“He’s farther away from being sick, he’s getting bigger and stronger,” Francona said. “He doesn’t even look like the same kid anymore. And his confidence has grown. He’s got a delivery that’s built for endurance. He’s turned into a phenomenal major league pitcher on top of being a phenomenal kid.”
Lester’s growth is even visible from the other dugout.
“Being in control of his emotions and then having that sense of belonging, I really believe this guy knows how good he is right now,” Rays manager Joe Maddon said. “I just think for him it’s been the experience of getting here and feeling like he belongs. This is what I’ve noticed from a distance.”
in-baseball record into the franchise’s first playoff appearance.
“We understand that whether we’re facing Lester, Godzilla, King Kong, we still have to just focus on the fact that we want to have some good at-bats, and if we keep it that simple we’re helping ourselves out,” Rays slugger Carlos Pena said. “I think if we start complicating a pitcher like Lester, that’s the worst thing you can do.”
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