He looked very good. Considering he was brought into a game with the Royals already trailing 7-1, it appears they are going to ease him in with mop up duty. I'm pretty sure at this point he's as good as gone. I wouldn't be so sure. There's 157 games to go and he has to stay on the roster for all of them. While he looked good tonight, he may not the next time he's used. Yeah, but they don't give a crap if he pitches effectively for them because their team sucks. Derrick Turnbow sucked as a Rule V pick. Miguel Asencio was bad for the Royals in '02 but they didn't care because they thought he had potential. Johan Santana winning the Cy Young gives even more incentive for crappy teams to hang onto high-ceiling players for their Rule V year. I said it when the draft went down, Sisco would be gone. Thank God we have Rohlicek and Randolph, though. For crying out loud, that's not why he was left unprotected. IT WAS NOT TO KEEP OTHER PLAYERS ON THE 40- MAN ROSTER, HE SHOULDN'T HAVE BEEN ON IT. I apologize for the shouting, but it seems many people have ignored this being the chief reason for Sisco's exposure, despite repeated attempts to explain so. OK, well can you explain again? I understand that there were questions about his maturity (wall punching) and work ethic (getting fat), but seriously, most 20-21 year olds are immature, and as for the work ethic - it's worth keeping a talented kid to try and hoping that he can be taught a better work ethic or can figure it out himself. It's not worth basically releasing a guy who is three years out of high school and still has a good deal of talent. He's not some guy like Josh Hamilton who is in and out of rehab... his problems weren't so severe that they couldn't be dealt with. Problem is that rostering him would have been rushing him pretty badly. He had an average to mediocre season at High A, and had weight/maturity/work ethic problems as you said. At that point, it's almost impossible to invision Sisco making and staying in the Major Leagues within 3 years. This would have been the scenario had he been protected on the 40-man, starting his option clock. By taking this gamble you control him for fewer years once he makes it to the big leagues, but it's a gamble worth taking when he looked as bad as he did all-around last year, and by rostering him you risk ruining him do to time constraints.