I'm reviving this thread, because once again, Dusty leaves his pitcher in for far too long. Mark Prior was at a 122 pitches when he surrenders an infield hit to Rafeal Furcal (which inexplicably score 2 runs -- only the Cubs). Prior had battled his heart out, striking out the next two hitters after finding himself in a runners on the corners jam with nobody out. Alas, he couldn't get Furcal and the Braves took a 2-1 lead in the top of the 7th inning. So of course it's time to take him out right? 122 pitches is a lot and there is no need to keep him out there. No, not when your Dusty Baker. You leave him in there to throw another 10 pitches and watch him give up another run to put the game seemingly out of reach. I am not one to legalistically harp on pitch-counts, but Dusty is clueless when it comes to taking out the starters. If he's not leaving in a pitcher to throw a huge number of pitches unnecessarily (except for Maddux), he usually waits one batter too late when taking them out of the game. Dusty never has the bullpen warming up in the latter innings "just in case" when the starter's pitch count is starting to pile up, it's always after the starter has created a jam for himself, or has given up the tying or go-ahead runs. BTW, final line for Prior? 132 pitches in 6.2 IP. If Prior finds himself on an operating table facing elbow surgery, I don't want to hear the excuses.