First post on the site (looooong time lurker), but I guess I'll come out firing. I think its fairly ridiculous to completely dismiss and/or belittle CuseCubsFan (which many here have) because of his belief that Prior didn't handle pressure well. There are virtually no statistics that would disprove this claim, as it is not a quantitative observation and based on subjective terminology. Giving statistics about BAA with runners on and/or ERA+ don't do anything to disprove him, because they don't define the situation in which they occurred (i.e. with an 8-0 lead, runners on 1st and 2nd and nobody out pose significantly less threat than 1st and 2nd and nobody out in a 2-1 game). Those who are somehow trying to use numbers to prove that his opinion is dumb seem to be falling into a variation of the logical fallacy of Argument from Ignorance, that is, a lack of evidence is not evidence of lack. He isn't making statements that can quantitatively be proven false (i.e. "Prior was a bad pitcher"); he's making qualitative statements regarding specific situations that are even more subjective in their interpretation ("pressure situations"). As such, he would have to define the exact situations he's discussing, and since his definition of what qualifies as a pressure situation is undoubtedly different from everyone else's, its impossible to quantitatively prove him wrong. Cuse's opinion is purely that--opinion based on observations of situations. You may disagree with his opinion, but since he is basing his opinion on non-quantitative entities (and using non-quantitative terminology like "pressure"), using statistics that certainly are incapable of capturing the extent of the situations in which he describes certainly does not prove him to have a stupid opinion. Actually, I think using statistics to disprove qualitative statements such as the nature of "pressure" seems to be the more ridiculous thing to do.