A lot of folks on this board follow baseball pretty closely, but some don't. And while Tampa Bay was, as always, God-awful this season, Carlos Pena has been one very bright spot for them. Coming into today's games, he ranked as follows in the American League: OBP - 9th (.398) SLG - 3rd (.597) OPS - 4th (.995) OPS+ - 5th (156) HR - 2nd (40) RBI - 4th (112) Runs Created - 5th (115) He had more RC/G than Pujols, should definitely win the AL Silver Slugger for 1B, and has arguably been the best first baseman in baseball in 2007. This is pretty stunning for a guy who was with four organizations (Detroit, NYY, Boston, Tampa) in the span of a year. So my question is, did the Tigers/Yankees/RedSox give up on him too early? I do think the Tigers gave up on him too quickly. He had a .241/.338/.472 line (112 OPS+) which is nothing amazing for a first baseman, but not awful either. He showed some increase in power and patience from the previous year as well. In 2005 he was horrible early in the year and was farmed out, where he raked to a .949 OPS. When he was recalled, he put up a 1.007 OPS in 38 games. One would have thought that this would earn him the first base job for 2006, but it went to Chris Shelton, while Pena was cut from the organization in spring training. He was okay with the Columbus Clippers in 2006, but they were sort of forced to release him on an agreement with the Yankees that if another team offered him a major league contract, they'd let him take it. He didn't spend much time with the Red Sox - not enough for any sort of evaluation. Was there any way to see this (2007) coming? I don't really mean being one of the three best 1B in baseball, because that was such a leap that nobody could have seen it coming. Obviously, he's probably the biggest bargain in all of baseball this year. I think it's an interesting study, to determine whether this was in any way foreseeable, or if it's just a complete fluke.