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Here's Why the San Francisco Giants Can't Give Up on Barry Zito

I was watching ESPN's "30 for 30" on the 2004 Boston Red Sox miracle comeback against the New York Yankees in the ALCS earlier tonight, and I realized something about our San Francisco Giants and their overpaid, but ironically worthless pitcher Barry Zito.

In 2004 the Red Sox had a highly paid starter who was a 20-game winner two seasons prior. However, the fellow in question had a miserable 2004 campaign, far worse than even Zito's 2010 season. This guy on the Sox was a disaster, walking scores of batters all season and giving up hit after hit.

His 2004 stats: 224 hits and 71 walks in 182.2 innings, which works out to a 1.61 WHIP and an awful 5.42 ERA. The only reason this pitcher had a 14-12 record that year and not something like 6-22 he rightfully deserved was because, of course, the Sox scored an ungodly amount of runs that year. Still, anyway you slice it, this guy was a walking gas can.

For comparisons sake, Zito's 2010 numbers are 184 hits and 84 walks in 199.1 innings, for a 1.34 WHIP, and a 4.15 ERA. He was 9-14. Of course his run support was a fraction of what that Red Sox pitcher enjoyed.

Anyway, Sox manager Terry Francona made it clear he had no use for this terrible pitcher in his ALDS rotation, preferring to go with unproven Bronson Arroyo as his third starter and knuckleballer Tim Wakefield if they needed a fourth game.

Still, he kept his fifth guy, who had a reputation for being even flightier than Zito, on the 25-man roster because you never know. He wound up coming in for relief in the 10th inning of Game Three against the godforsaken Angels, and he got the W when David "Big Papi" Ortiz hit a walkoff homer to sweep good-for-nothing Anaheim.

Due to rainouts, injuries, blowouts, and emergencies, he wound up starting twice in the ALCS. In Game Four where he was so-so but wound up with a no-decision in a game the Sox won to keep their season going. Then again in Game Seven on two days rest, where he gave them a masterful six innings at Yankee Stadium to get the win as Boston came all the way back from an 0-3 deficit to shock the Yanks.

A week later this same pitcher once again started a Game Four, this time in the World Series, and again he pitched incredibly and got the win, as the Sox officially ended their 86-year championship drought.

Of course by now you know this mystery pitcher is Derek Lowe, who just so happens to be starting Game One of the NLDS for the Atlanta Braves against the Giants.

So my suggestion to Giants skipper Bruce Bochy would be to keep Zito on the roster. Because you never know.

Read more MLB news on BleacherReport.com

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