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Zito gets the ball in Game 1 after dazzling Cards in NLCS

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(MCT) — SAN FRANCISCO — San Francisco Giants manager Bruce Bochy, who two years ago told Barry Zito he would not be a part of the team’s postseason plans that season, tried to deliver some happier news to the former Cy Young Award winner Tuesday. And tried. And tried again.

What Bochy wanted to say was that Zito would be taking the ball in Game 1 of the World Series for the Giants Wednesday against the Detroit Tigers and their ace, Justin Verlander.

“I tried to call him all day,” Bochy said. “He left his phone at the ballpark, so I couldn’t get ahold of him.”

Circumstances of the misplacing were not clear. But the possibility the phone had been forgotten amid the Giants’ clubhouse celebration Monday night underscored the difference between their route into the Series and that of the Tigers.

While the Giants finished off the St. Louis Cardinals in Game 7 of the National League Championship Series at home, the Tigers watched from Detroit, having clinched the American League pennant four days earlier by sweeping the New York Yankees.

That gave manager Jim Leyland plenty of time to set his rotation with Verlander at the top, ruling out any communication breakdown.

“He told me he was pitching Game 1,” Leyland said of Verlander, “so I said OK.”

Zito, meanwhile, will be pitching Wednesday on regular rest after his series-saving Game 5 start against the Cardinals, setting up a fascinating contrast in styles.

In St. Louis, Zito beguiled the Cardinals with curveballs and changeups that allowed him to sneak his 85-mph fastball past a series of hitters. After the game, he said, “Yeah, my fastball is set up by my off-speed, that’s no secret.

“If I can command the fastball to both sides of the plate and throw most of my off-speed for strikes, I’ll get them to miss the barrel, and that’s what I’m going for.”

Verlander, the 2011 Cy Young Award winner and American League MVP, is a fireballer who consistently throws in the mid- to-high 90s to go with a knee-buckling curveball. He has been the best pitcher on the best pitching staff in the playoffs, going 3-0 with an 0.74 ERA in 241/3 innings and striking out 25.

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