Because a lot of pitchers can have a good half-season before scouting reports come together. You claimed he had one good year. He actually had a couple very good seasons in the minors and a season and a half's worth of good performance at the major league level. It's not like he magically strung together 32 good starts in 2007 after doing nothing of note prior to that. And the point about scouting reports isn't really relevant here. He was very good in 2006 and was able to still pitch well in 2007. His struggles since then have little (if anything) to do with hitters adjusting. It has to do with his sudden inability to consistently find the strikezone. To be completely honest, that IS what I think Rich's problem is - failure to adjustment. With such a limited pitch repertoire, inconsitant pitch location, and questionable mental makeup on the mound....yea....I think it is failure to adjust. And if you disagree with that, instead of arguing over it, Im just curious - What is your opinion on why he fell apart? We can argue over if he's a good pitcher or not endlessly....but why do you think he suddenly collapsed? Who knows? It's not my problem to solve, and obviously the folks tasked with figuring it out haven't been able to yet. The bottom line is that he had control problems early in his minor league career. He straightened it out for a couple years at that level and then again at the major league level for about a season and a half. Now it's back, worse than ever. This has nothing to do with scouting reports as you mentioned a couple posts ago. I don't know if his problem is mechanical or mental (possibly a bit of both) or even if he's injured. Whatever is causing it, he's suddenly not able to command his pitches, outside of a single start here and there. That's the big problem here. If you can't command your pitches, you're going to walk a lot of hitters, and when you do throw a strike, there's a good chance it won't be a quality one. As many people have pointed out in this thread, it wouldn't be worth the Cubs just parting ways with him at this point. He'd have little trade value, and he's not exactly eating up a ton of payroll. As long as they don't go into 2009 counting on him to be a fixture in the rotation, that gives them some time to work with him and try to solve this problem. Anything he provides will be a bonus. We've seen that he's capable of being a quality major league starting pitcher. It's worth the effort to find out if he can get back to that level of performance.