FORT MYERS, Fla. -- Jon Lester pitched in his first game Monday since his last cancer treatment just two months ago.
His mechanics were good and his command was outstanding as the Boston Red Sox left-hander retired all three batters he faced on grounders.
"It's great. Just to get back and be normal again is awesome, just to get back on the mound and throw the baseball and not worry about other things," the 23-year-old said. "So it's good, and I enjoyed it and, hopefully, we just build from here."
Lester underwent chemotherapy after being diagnosed with anaplastic large cell lymphoma late last season. He's now cancer free and has regained much of the weight he lost during the treatments.
The plan was for Lester, an outstanding starter since making his major-league debut last June 10, to throw just the first inning in the ``B'' game against the Minnesota Twins. He needed only eight pitches to get through that. His six fastballs, all strikes, were clocked at between 88-90 mph. He threw two curves in the dirt at 69-72 mph.
Lester feels strong enough to pitch longer and has pitched in bullpen sessions at the same pace as other starters. But Boston manager Terry Francona wants to bring him along slowly.
"They have my best interests involved and I'm not too worried about it," Lester said. "I'll get my work in one way or the other, so we'll just take it slow and go from here."
Lester is to throw next in a bullpen session on Wednesday then pitch one inning Saturday in a simulated game against Boston teammates. With a very solid starting rotation, the Red Sox don't have to rush him.
Taking the mound at 10:05 a.m., Lester retired Alexi Casilla on a grounder to shortstop, Glenn Williams on a grounder to third and Mike Redmond on another grounder to shortstop.
As a rookie last year, Lester became the first Red Sox left-hander to win his first five decisions. He was 7-2 with a 4.76 ERA. But in late August, he was diagnosed with anaplastic large cell lymphoma, a type of cancer in the body's lymph system.
He underwent six chemotherapy treatments -- one in Boston then five in Seattle near his home town of Puyallup, Wash.
Before his fifth treatment, a CT scan showed no cancer. He began throwing Dec. 4, and the sixth and final treatment took place Dec. 21.
Lester reported to training camp in early February, about two weeks before pitchers and catchers were due.
On Monday morning, he returned to the mound in a quiet, cool stadium. The temperature was 54 degrees when the game began. About 15 scouts, at least three with speed guns to measure his pitchers, sat behind home plate.
"I was trying to throw as hard as I could. I was trying to make it as game-like as possible and get that adrenaline going again," Lester said.
Only about 200 fans were scattered throughout the stands and they didn't have to pay since teams don't charge admission for "B" games.
"I tried to treat it as much like just a normal game as I could, tried not to get too amped up, tried not to worry too much about it and just get a good night's sleep and come in here and get my work done," he said.
There were some jitters on his first pitch to second baseman Casilla. But that 88 mph fastball down the middle for a called strike was a significant milestone.
"After that first pitch," Lester said, "it was like, OK, everything's back to normal, throwing to hitters again that I don't know and just enjoying it, having fun."