see, you're assuming that he had "it" and that it was somehow "lost." the truth of the matter is he temporarily "lost" the crappy pitching and found a momentary blip of goodness. it's like when a good player goes into a slump...he has a temporary bad spell...he momentarily "loses" it. except glendon's career has been pretty much awful, so you have to look at a temporary run of effectiveness as you would look at a temporary run of ineffectiveness from a good player. you seem to be looking at this like cubs management looks at the whole team...refusing to acknowledge the fact that most of the players suck, and believing that they're currently going thru a rough patch that will somehow eventually even out. that's not how it works. This is just a cynical joke, right? You don't actually believe that. Do you? I only ask because after making what seemed like an incredibly sarcastic joke, you then used it as the basis of an argument that you seem to expect to hold water. why would that be a joke? he's been terrible his entire career. therefore, when he has a short run of success, it seems logical to write it off as a run of good luck. or do you prefer to consider his 6-7 years of crap just a wacky turn of bad fortune? Well I thought it was a joke because otherwise it is incredibly insulting. I can see a guy with Rusch's past putting together a good month and chalking it up to luck, but not 14 months of very good to excellent performance. To say that a guy who has the talent and worked hard enough to make it to the big leagues would only have a year and a half of success because of luck is completely out of touch with reality. People don't have extended period of success at something that they have dedicated their life to succeeding at because of luck. They struggle and fail and struggle and fail and then, one day, they figure it out unless, of course it is only for a few weeks. Or if it is inconsistent, up and down all year long. But that simply doesn't accurately describe how Rusch had performed for the Cubs heading into this season. Does it? Do you know what it is like to compete with the best in the world at something? To do what it takes to succeed at that level? Luck? No offense, but that has to be the most out of touch with reality notion I've heard in a long time on this board. In the context of nearly 10 seasons, 14 months is statistically insignificant. just under 10 total seasons, about 55 months. 14 good months equates to a percentage of 25-26%. That percentage may make a decent batting average, but for a pitcher it isn't acceptable. And if you are referring to his 14 months with the Cubs, 7 have been very good, 2 mediocre, and 5 abysmal. About 50/50. Not good. And his very bad stretches have been more extreme than his good stretches. Insulting or not, what abuck said was dead on accurate. Glendon has been in the league long enough to get an accurate read on him, to know what you can expect and what is anomaly. His decent stretches have been anomalous, there is not logical or empirical argument to the contrary, no matter how you try and spin it. None of his failure can be regarded as "bad luck". Glendon has the talent to be in the majors, but just barely. And don't delude yourself by saying just because a player has had any degree of success it means they belong. The league is full of players whose 5 minutes of success have earned them a longer stay than they deserve. Few have managed to wear out their welcome as long as Glendon. 10 years the vast majority of them ranging from bad to abysmal. This isn't some kid who just needs to be given his shot. He has proven that he is not good. He has been up long enough for all the luck and ups and downs to play out. 10 seasons is longer than necessary for the law of averages to pass judgement on Rusch. Baseball is not about humanitarian and feel good notions about players. It's a business, and Rusch's stock is not good. Rusch has had an up and down career, but the valleys have been far deeper and longer than the peaks have been high. His stuff is marginal. His numbers are terrible, and getting worse with every trip he takes to the mound. How much time should his good 2004 buy him? He latest bad stretch has already been nearly as long as the sum total of his good stretches. And don't say he was decent last year, he wasn't. A WHIP of over 1.5 is BAD. Go ahead and bring up Schmidt again. He has had a very good career, and has earned the benefit of the doubt. Rusch hasn't. We can eliminate the pitchers withless that 150 inning because most of the were either demoted or cut loose, while Glendon kept getting his undeserved shots. If you are determined to defend Glendon, go ahead. But your argument is totally flawed, more sentiment than logic.