I think you’re proving my original point more than refuting it. Development isn’t just bullpen sessions, TrackMan numbers, or internal evaluations. At some point, development requires meaningful game reps — especially in situations where pitchers are trusted to work through adversity, make adjustments, and learn from failure.You have banged on this theme for a good part of the year. What do you think constitutes development? I would love to hear some details. Perhaps you could include how few chances each of our key relievers have received both this year, and since you mentioned it's like this every year, include the opportunities the chances the returning pitchers got. While you're at maybe include the decision process the coaches go through and some of the data they collect and evaluate when making their decisions as well as how they collect that data. What factors do they consider when decided who gets to pitch and who doesn't. Don't forget to include the obligation of the player to apply what they've been taught when they are given the (few) chances they've been given. Oh, and be sure to include a metric for the coaches in-game decision process as to when enough is enough should a pitcher not actually be at the point of peak performance.
I fully understand coaches use data, matchup analysis, practice performance, command metrics, recovery information, and countless other factors when making decisions. That’s part of high-level baseball. But fans are also allowed to question whether opportunities are distributed in a way that maximizes long-term growth, especially when the same few arms consistently carry the load year after year.
Nobody is asking for medical charts or proprietary analytics. The discussion is simply whether pitchers can truly develop into reliable high-leverage options without being allowed to pitch through real high-leverage moments. There’s a difference between “being in the program” and actually gaining experience.
And yes, execution matters. When players get opportunities, they have to perform. But if the leash for some pitchers is significantly shorter than for others, it naturally raises questions about how trust is established and how confidence is built.
At the end of the day, this isn’t an attack on the staff. It’s a discussion about philosophy, workload distribution, and whether balancing winning today with developing depth for tomorrow can be handled differently.