Well, I'm a week late thanks to my internet service provider, but I'll share my thoughts. Obviously the contract is big. Huge. Will he be overpaid? Sure. But, he's a good player, quite possibly very good if his 2006 season wasn't a fluke. It was going to take a buttload of money to sign him, and with guys like Gary Matthews Jr and Juan Pierre making about $10M per, this deal doesn't look so outrageous. If the current economic climate is really here to stay, the deal might look really reasonable in a year or two. Anyway, will he sustain his 2005 performance? I tend to believe that he will, because he's an extremely talented player whose main weakness was strike zone judgement. He hit very well for several years without controlling the strike zone much, and last year, when his plate discipline improved, so did his numbers. Remember, Sammy Sosa was a good-but-not-great hitter for 8 big league seasons before he took off, as a result of learning how to control the strike zone. The steroid whispers, if you believe them, increased Sosa's ability to hit the ball far - but not his ability to not swing at crappy pitches. For some guys who are super-talented but always used that natural talent to succeed, it takes a long time for the plate discipline to click. I also think Hendry is probably right when he says Soriano is a "young 30." He's a great athlete and is still fairly small and wiry despite his big power numbers. Obviously, his ability to steal bases will go downhill as he gets older, but good base-stealers like Bonds, Sosa, Biggio and Molitor lost their ability to run fast as well, and still were good players well into their 30s. The important thing is that his game isn't built on speed, like Juan Pierre. Yeah, Carlos Beltran would've been nice. But when you look back to his signing - he too was coming off a career year. His discipline clearly had been improving, but his OBP was below-average just two years before his free agent year. He's younger, and that is important... but he had a below-average OPS+ (95) his first year in New York, so obviously he's not infallible. I'd surely take him over Soriano, but what's done is done, and all the Cubs can do is go foward and try to build the best team they can. The offense was incompetent in 2006, and Soriano is a huge upgrade over Pierre. With Lee and Ramirez, you have three real cornerstones in place, and Barrett and Murton are two very solid complementary players. This should not be a bad offense in 2006, and quite possibly could be a pretty good offense. It's not my money, and as long as the Cubs are committed to expanding the payroll, I'm happy about the signing. If they go cheap in 2 years and want the payroll less than $100M, then Soriano's contract will be a millstone, but I really do feel optimistic about how he'll produce in a Cub uniform.