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Barry Zito and San Francisco Giants Fans: Is There Hope for Reconciliation?

Barry Zito has given the San Francisco Giants fans nothing short of 126 million reasons to hate him.

As excited as the Giants’ organization and fanbase had been to get the former Cy Young Award winner (can you believe he used to be that good?), San Francisco quickly came to despise the pitcher who all but robbed the bank of one of baseball’s most storied franchises.

In the five seasons that Zito has pitched for the Giants (2007-11), he’s posted a horrendous 4.55 ERA to go with a 43-61 record in over 800 IP. That fell far short of the Giants’ expectations of him. San Francisco had reason to believe that there was still something left of the pitcher who won 23 games in 2002.

That said, the argument that he was overrated certainly has merit: Zito had hovered around a .500 winning percentage from 2003-06 and never had an ERA below 3.30. The Giants were expecting a miracle to reappear from the shadows of a one-hit wonder.

Fast forward to 2012 and actually, Barry Zito has been impressive by his (albeit low) standards. As of 9/22, Zito has 13 wins and an ERA just above 4.00.

But the Giants have finally become accustomed to the results they will be getting when they put Zito on the mound. It is not Matt Cain or Madison Bumgarner out there, but a mediocre pitcher who can occasionally put together good starts.

If the ultimate judge of a pitcher is whether or not his team gets a “W” when the lights go off after the game, Zito has been outstanding. Yes, Barry Zito with his 4.18 ERA and his 84 MPH fastball has actually been outstanding in something.

The Giants have won every single one of Zito’s past nine starts. A perfect 9-0.

 

Granted, the Giants have managed to amass over six runs per game for Zito during that stretch but the end result is what matters, and the end result has been quite pleasing of late.

Believe it or not, Zito has actually put together an impressive month of September even by a traditional pitcher’s standards, having a 3-0 record to complement an impressive 2.66 ERA and only five walks in 23.2 IP. (He still has one more start in September to blow it though so the jury is still waiting to see if the real Barry Zito will please stand up.)

Is this enough to satisfy Giants fans? Certainly not. The stress he has caused and games he has lost are still all too fresh in the city by the bay.

But is there a way out for Barry Zito? Now that is a much more complicated question. If he manages to continue to put together starts that may not be stellar but get the job done, it is a realistic possibility.

Especially if the Giants make a deep playoff run supported by Zito in the back-end of the rotation, who knows? Baseball is a funny game that is based on one fundamental idea: what have you done for me lately?

Look no further than the demise that has been Tim Lincecum. The Freak has two Cy Young awards to his name but the Giants no longer trust the former ace who led the Giants to lose 12 out of his first 14 starts of the 2012 season.

As Lincecum has shown, the “what have you done for me lately?” philosophy will get you nowhere if the results are not consistent. Recently it has been looking better for Zito, no doubt. When it comes down to crunch time will be the true test of Zito’s grit (or whatever is left of it).

Barry Zito has the power to change Giants fans opinion of him in the next month. If he does not do it now, he may have cemented his unfortunate legacy as the most overpaid Giant of all time.

No pressure, Barry.

 

Be sure to read more Giants writing at Bases and Baskets, including a comparison of the 2010 World Series champions to the 2012 Giants team!

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Tim Lincecum: It’s Now or Never for the Freak, Giants vs. Astros

Tim Lincecum is sporting a 3-10 record and a 6.42 ERA going into his first start after the All-Star break.

Something has to change, and it has to change now. Of the 18 games that Lincecum has started, the Giants have only won four. Substitute in a mediocre pitcher who wins maybe half of those 18 games, and the Giants would be 52-35 and have a solid couple-game lead in the NL West.

These numbers are shocking and not something you would expect from a two-time Cy Young Award winner who is still only 28 years old.

They are horrendous, terrible, awful—I mean, you pick the adjective and it fits Lincecum’s wretched numbers and performance. There is no place for someone who is doing so badly on one of the best pitching rotations. Madison Bumgarner, Matt Cain and Ryan Vogelsong are some of the best pitchers in baseball. Each one is a top-five pitcher in a major pitching statistical category (wins, ERA, strikeouts and/or WHIP).

But Lincecum is in a perfect position to rebound off of his two previous starts in which he couldn’t finish four innings and gave up 14 runs combined. Timmy will be in front of a home crowd that will be praying that he can figure it out.

And the Houston Astros have the fewest wins in the National League and not a hitter batting over .300. Four of the five Astros starting pitchers with over 60 innings pitched have ERAs over 4.50.

If “The Freak” can’t get it turned around now, there is no reason to expect he will figure it out anytime soon. Sadly, it isn’t all that perplexing that the former Giants ace is doing so terribly; throwing 93-95 MPH consistently for a couple years with his wiry frame just cannot physically hold up.

The guy is not even six feet tall, and he weighs a mere 160 pounds.

If Lincecum doesn’t figure it out, the Giants need to trade him. He is due $22 million next year and may not be worth $1 million. It may not be the popular decision considering what Lincecum has done for the Giants, but it makes financial and baseball sense.

That is, of course, assuming he doesn’t rebound. If he rebounds, these trade talks will dissipate into the summer night.

Let’s see if Lincecum can pull it together starting tonight.

 

Read more of my baseball, basketball and Bay Area sports writing on the popular website, Bases and Baskets.

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