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After comeback season, Barry Zito looks to keep the momentum when he faces Cardinals again

SAN FRANCISCO - Barry Zito is coming off his biggest season in years, a redeeming, comeback season. Yet he sees absolutely no reason to be nostalgic about anything he accomplished during the Giants' 2012 championship run.
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San Francisco Giants' Barry Zito pitches to the Oakland Athletics during the first inning of an exhibition spring training baseball game, Friday, March 29, 2013 in San Francisco. (AP Photo/George Nikitin)

SAN FRANCISCO - Barry Zito is coming off his biggest season in years, a redeeming, comeback season.

Yet he sees absolutely no reason to be nostalgic about anything he accomplished during the Giants' 2012 championship run.

Not even that season-saving Game 5 win he pitched in the NL championship series against St. Louis. The Cardinals come to AT&T Park on Friday for the Giants' home opener, and Zito will be on the mound to face them once again amid much fanfare as the city celebrates another title during a festive pregame ceremony.

Zito expects to be so focused on his start that he will do his best to ignore the highly anticipated sideshow as San Francisco kicks off a six-game homestand that also includes three games with the NL West rival Colorado Rockies.

"I can't predict how I am," Zito said. "I would like to stay focused on what I have to do and my process and not get caught up too much in the festivities and stuff like that. That's great for the fans, obviously. That's for them to enjoy but for us we've got to focus on our tasks."

The Giants will raise the championship flag before the Friday afternoon contest, then honour NL MVP and batting champion Buster Posey before Saturday's game. Zito played a key role in winning the trophy.

Matt Cain, who pitched the franchise's first perfect game last June 13, understands the madness of it all on opening day or in the home opener. He was in Zito's spot for the 2011 home debut in front of a sellout crowd following the 2010 title run — the first championship since the storied franchise moved West from New York in 1958.

"You'd definitely like to enjoy taking part in them but your main goal is to go out there and worry about pitching and just stay on that routine," Cain said.

With San Francisco facing elimination down 3-1 in the best-of-seven NLCS, Zito beat the Cardinals in St. Louis to send the series back to the Bay Area. The Giants won two more to reach the World Series, then Zito beat Justin Verlander and the well-rested Detroit Tigers in Game 1 to help lead a stunning 4-0 sweep.

And, to think only two years earlier, the high-priced lefty was left off the post-season roster for all three rounds as San Francisco won it all. Now, Zito begins the seventh year of his $126 million, seven-year contract with something to prove again.

Whether he carries over any momentum from 2012, Zito has no idea. These days, he doesn't count on anything — and approaches each day, each outing, with a fresh perspective.

That mindset worked so well last year, and he hopes for a repeat.

"I think it could be a bad thing to take a false sense of security into the season based on what we've done in the past," Zito said.

Zito, who turns 35 next month, went 15-8 with a 4.15 ERA in 32 starts and 184 1-3 innings before his impressive playoffs. The wins were his most since crossing the bay from Oakland to join the Giants before the 2007 season.

He has plenty of incentive to put up another similar season.

The 2002 AL Cy Young Award winner with the A's has an $18 million option for 2014 with a $7 million buyout on the contract he signed before the 2007 season, but his option becomes guaranteed if he throws 200 innings this year.

He hopes to build on a strong spring.

"He's been right on, really since Game 1," manager Bruce Bochy said.

Cain, and the rest of the roster for that matter, is eager to see how this team performs with a full season together. Second baseman Marco Scutaro and right fielder Hunter Pence were midseason acquisitions who made huge contributions.

"It's nice to have pretty much everybody back," Cain said. "I think we're excited about that because we know who's going out there and we know what's going to happen. We know what guys are doing. That's confidence."