If the numbers for a cylinder are creeping like that, both the baffling and induction should be checked to see that they're installed and working as designed. On an O-200, the #2 is the aft cylinder on the pilot's side, and I have frequently found the baffling around the aft side not wrapped and retained against the cylinder like it should be. There are supposed to be wires with springs, or at least some lockwire, between the bottom edges of the front and rear baffles, running under the cylinders, so keep the baffles in contact with the fins so that cooling air has to follow the fins around to the bottom so that it collects as much heat as possible.
I have also found intercylinder baffles loose or missing.
The induction hoses and their clamps need to be in place and secure. The gaskets for the induction elbows at the heads need to be in place. They can get blown out by a backfire, letting a cylinder run lean and hot.
All of this stuff is annual-inspection stuff. All of it. Look at a small part of the inspection checklist for a 150:
Every 50 hours is Cessna's idea of an inspection of that stuff. But FAR 43 Appendix D, the very brief list of the annual stuff to check to meet legal minima, looks like this for the engine section:
Baffles aren't even mentioned. They would be included under (10) All systems, but it seems that too many mechanics just give things a really cursory glance, based on the stuff I've found.
Baffle fit is important. This picture gives an idea, but it mistakenly shows the baffles a little way from the cylinder fins. They're supposed to be right up against the fins.