A lot going on around these parts. More than 25% of the Cubs roster will prepare to head to Gotham for the All-Star Game, the team is about a week away from being fully healthy, and they survived the most treacherous stretch of the season while battling alluded-to injuries without once relinquishing their position atop first place on which they have had a grip since May 12th. And, to top things off, they made a big pickup yesterday, without even hardly making any concessions.

Yep. Things are looking up for the Cubs. So let’s say we take a minute and all goof on Dusty, shall we?

Early during the radio broadcast of last night’s workmanlike ass-whuppin’, Cubs’ play-by-play man (and thankless sherpa to bufoonish clown Ron Santo) Pat Hughes began to discuss Reds’ starter Aaron Harang’s recent struggles. As Cub fans know, prior to last September, Harang had been a mouthbreathing thorn in the Cubs’ side his whole career. More recently, of course, Harang had gone from garden-variety Cub Killer to an actual elite pitcher in the National League, posting three straight seasons of sub-4 ERA while pitching in that bandbox in Cincinnati and ranking among NL leaders in Wins and Strikeouts. In fact, Harang actually finished 4th in Cy Young Award voting last year.

Last night Harang walked seven Cubs, gave up six earned runs, and lost for the eleventh time on the year. His ERA is now at 4.76, a full run over his average from the last three years.

One wonders what may have happened to Harang for his fortunes to have reversed so suddenly.

In his typical polite, non-controversial manner, Hughes began discussing this game from May 25th. The Reds were pushed into extra innings against San Diego and our favorite contrarian dumbass, having depleted his bullpen, called on Harang in the 13th inning.

Okay. No big deal. Managers have long been known to get an inning or two out of a starter in that situation, particulary if said starter hadn’t pitched for a few days.

Only Baker left Harang in for four innings. For SIXTY THREE PITCHES. This, after Harang had started three days earlier (and thrown 103 pitches).

Prior to having Dusty enter him in the MLB equivalent of the Ironman contest, Harang’s ERA was 3.50. He had given up 73 hits in 74 2/3 innings. Since that outing in San Diego? Harang has given up 63 hits in 44 1/3 innings and his ERA is 7.31. For the season, his ERA has jumped over a run and a quarter (from 3.50 to 4.76), and we’re talking only just a little over a six week period. That’s not easy to do.

It looks like the same guy who routinely let Mark Prior and Kerry Wood exceed 120 pitches has really learned his lesson, huh? My only hope is that Baker is able to continue to keep that team tethered to his idoitic worldview before the organization actually catches on.