No disrespect intended to anyone but I find this extremely implausible, on multiple levels. None taken. But it's true. So is the assertion then that (1) Prior could have pitched through shoulder tendonitis but chose not to and (2) told his cousin it's because he didn't want to be "abused by Dusty any longer"? I'll certainly buy (1) because of the horrible numbers he put up: 1-7 with a 1.61 WHIP trying to pitch through discomfort before he was shut down. But not (2). Even assuming he felt that way about Dusty, why on earth would he actually say that to his cousin? [ Edit: btw I'm not questioning nick's integrity ... in my opinion he represented his info properly ("3rd hand, take it for what it's worth", etc.) I'm only questioning whether the story is actually true as relayed here. ] Fact of the matter is, Dusty did not abuse Prior this year. The lesser of the evils in Prior's mind could very well have been "I'm not pitching until I'm 100%". He was risking millions in the future FA market if he continued to suck and become labeled a flash in the pan has-been rather than a tough luck, injury-prone stud. But in those 9 starts you can hardly say Dusty abused him ... his pitch counts: 88 91 101 109 76 103 106 103 58 Even if you throw out that last 58 when he got shelled by the Brewers, he still averaged under 100 pitches per start and was never asked to pitch more than 6 innings (albeit usually b/c he was getting shelled). That is not abuse. And by the way, about 2003, he did ask Prior and Wood to throw a lot of pitches down the stretch - no doubt. But in Dusty's defense, what manager wouldn't have ridden them hard given the hot division races plus the relatively shaky Cub pen? I think Dusty was a terrible baseball strategist and has deserved much of the criticism he's gotten, but I feel he's unfairly blamed for Wood & Prior's health the past three years.