he went to college, that's why is age is higher than you'd like it to be. i, for one, am kinda glad that dusty wasn't in charge of how he was used when he was 22-23. The problem here is that top college pitching prospects aren't supposed to take as long to be major league ready. (I'm not sure he applies as one, but for the sake of discussion...) The high school guys are considered to be more projects than the college guys. It doesn't apply to all college pitchers, because some of them just suck and aren't good enough for the big show. In Hill's case, it's taking too long for him to be major league dominant. He should be able to have stretches, even when he's still a little 'green' where he can dominate major league hitting. That's if he's as good as advertised. Of course the sample size we have is a bit too small, so the only way we'll know is to put him out there and roll the dice. The downside to that is if he gets man-handled by MLB hitters over the course of a few months - his value at age 26 will be nil. Best bet is probably to trade him now for the best possible MLB talent we can. Otherwise, its ____ or get off the pot for Rich Hill this year. well, i don't think that's the case. there's no doubt that hill's a late bloomer. but you can't argue w/ the #'s he put up last year, and his strikeout #'s have ALWAYS been out of this world. it's not like major league pitchers retire at 28...he's still got some time left regardless of what he does in the first few months of this season. if every gm in baseball was asking him about him at the winter meetings, i doubt it drops to no gm's asking about him in june...even if he struggles. I agree with your sentiment, but am not so quick to concede that Hill is a late bloomer. Prior, Mulder, and other college pitchers that make the majors in the blink of an eye are still a rarity, not the norm. in his first full year of pro ball Hill dominated low A. in his second year he was in high A, not as dominant but still very good and still had great preipherals. in his third full year in pro ball he corrected his biggest problem (walks), dominated the high minors, and made it to the major leagues. to me, Rich Hill is exacly where he should be and has a great chance to be a very good, and perhaps dominant, pitcher in the majors for 6-8 years. I think the problem is a disconnect with the career curve of major league pitchers. the greats tend to break into the majors at a younger age and last until they are older than most, but many pitchers who come out of high school and college don't break into the majors and start performing well until their mid 20's.