There's something to be said about being efficient, but let's not pretend that strikeouts are a bonus. A pitcher can only control so much, and striking people out is the best he can do in that regard. When you start pitching to contact, you open up a lot of variables outside the pitcher's control. I'm not saying that you try to strike out every hitter, but when you have the stuff conducive for it(and possibly stuff/control NOT conducive to hitting spots and getting poorly batted balls), K's and power pitching should be the route taken. As far as pitch counts go in general, there is no magic number of pitches a pitcher should go over, that's been said. There's exceptions on both ends of the spectrum(Livan, the aforementioned Lieber), but generally you're opening yourself up to injury the more pitches you throw, because the more pitches you throw the more likely your mechanics will break down. That's the thing. One day Zambrano may be focused and still be going strong with good mechanics at 110 pitches, another day he may have had a rough night of chatting online and starts losing his arm angle at 90 pitches. Now, as this applies to Baker, he pretty much ignores common sense in this matter. People who are much better at identifying mechanics than me(UK for example), have pointed out when one of our guys is losing his mechanics at a lower pitch count, and when he still looks pretty good at a high pitch count. However, Baker has continually pushed the envelope. There's no sense in sending Zambrano out there to rack up 120+ pitches when we're winning in a blowout. There's something to be said for making sure he gets his work in, but we could find multiple examples of unnecessarily sending starters out for an extra inning when it's not needed. Add in the fact that we carry a 12 man pen where it appears that someone always gets lost in the shuffle for extended periods, it's even more inexcusable to risk the health of one of our prized arms. Ack, sorry about the length, just wanted to address the various topics brought up.