With how well the bullpen has been performing of late and the current 40-man roster crunch, you're right, Rucker's chance may be a long way off. But I don't think it's because the Cubs have anything against him. After a rough 1st two outings, Rucker has put together 4 good ones totaling 8 IP, 3 H, 1 R, 1 ER, 1 BB, 12 K. That's impressive though not much of a sample size. The Cubs have good bullpen depth in AAA right now with Trevor McGill and Brad Wieck already on the 40-man and Robert Stock seemingly ahead of Rucker in the pecking order. Heck, even Kyle Ryan is pitching like a man possessed after the Cubs DFA'd him and every MLB team decided to pass on giving him a look. Even if he keeps this up, Rucker will still need either some massive under-performance by current major league relievers, 1 or 2 of them to get 60-day IL stints or some bullpen pieces being traded away in order to get placed on the 40-man. And with Rowan Wick getting closer to returning (and thus coming off the 60-day IL), that's about to get even harder to do. Ultimately, it's a good problem for the Cubs to have and a tough spot for Rucker to be in. All he can do is keep stringing together dominant outings and possibly force Cubs management to shuffle the deck and make room for him. I guess my thing is, why bother converting him to relief when he was quite effective as a starter? He throws strikes, gets whiffs, and keeps the ball in the yard. I imagine his stuff has only improved now that we ramped up the infrastructure. Now we have an extremely crowded picture and he's way down the pecking order it appears, while we have 3 SP whom he could possibly approximate in the rotation. He's 27 now and his track record reflects a guy who should be in the Majors already, IMO. A team so starving for SP sure seems content to take other teams trash and try to turn it into treasure rather than just seeing what they have in their own chest.