I would think, though, that if a pitcher began spring training with control problems, changing his mechanics would be a risky proposition. Instead of focusing on correcting the control issues, they altered his mechanics and hoped that it would help take care of his control. It looks like it only made things worse. They rolled the dice a bit and it didn't pay off. And as for what Rich has said publicly, there's no way he'd place any of the blame on the coaching staff. He's been slammed for speaking up before and he's not going to put his neck on the line like that. In addition, just because the mechanical changes were intended to be minimal doesn't mean that the result will also be minimal. I defer to this post BK made back on April 11: There was a clear difference back in mid-April. If his release point stayed consistent for the last few weeks that he was up with the Cubs, I think it would be safe to say that the change was a bad thing. The question now is what to do with him. There's no way for us to know how his back is doing, but with the trade deadline approaching, I'd imagine that Hendry would be pretty hesitant to shut him down and have him work strictly on the side for two or three weeks. But I also don't know what these performances are doing to his trade value. Hill's recent outing may not be making it that much worse considering he's probably already in high-reward project status.