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What if you fought back from cancer and returned to Major League ball?

T1 Jon Lester
Take heart, weary sports fans. There is good news in your morning newspaper, if you can get past the referee betting scandal in the NBA, the Bad Newz about Michael Vick contributing to the rogue state that is the NFL, steroids in golf and Barry Bonds trying to become the all-time home run champion under the threat of a federal indictment.

Check out Monday night’s Red Sox-Indians box score. The starting pitcher for Boston was Jon Lester, a 23-year-old left-hander who 11 months ago heard doctors tell him he had an illness called anaplastic large cell lymphoma. Cancer. Treatable, the doctors told him, but a blood cancer nonetheless.

“It just floored the entire organization,” Red Sox GM Theo Epstein says. “And yet the ones who consistently have shown the most maturity and understanding throughout all this have been Jon and his family. It’s an amazing story. It happened at a time when as an organization we were feeling sorry for ourselves, with injuries and getting swept five game by the Yankees. It’s a cliche, I know, but this really puts things in perspective.”

In that box score Jon Lester, who gave up two runs over six innings with his parents watching from the stands, is listed as the winning pitcher. But you knew that already.

Yes, he is a cancer survivor. But last night was the start toward Lester getting his baseball career, if not his life, back to the everyday challenges and triumphs he worried about before he ever heard the words “anaplastic large cell lymphoma.” He can sweat the small stuff again, like trying to locate cutters against the Indians, the AL’s leading home-run hitting team, or trying to stay with the Red Sox for good.

Source: Sports Illustrated

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