Not really, an above average backup catcher probably would have been the best position player the cubs have developed in the last 20 years. true, the cubs' piss-poor management and player development has a lot to do with that, but bp's projections of soto suggest he could be a borderline all-star for the next several years. his projected worth is about $10-11M per year. and he could end up being jorge posada with fewer walks but better defense. i think if anyone had said all this a year ago, it would've sounded completely ridiculous. I think BP might be wrong on the "fewer walks" predictions. If he keeps mashing AND staying patient, teams will start pitching around him more for fear of the damage he will do if they give him something to hit. Everything about this guy when you watch him makes you think we're watching a very polished and experienced veteran at the plate. By the way, is Von Joshua the man who gets the credit for Soto's turnaround? the "fewer walks" thing wasn't them, that was my guess. it's hard for most guys to walk as frequently as posada does; at his peak he was walking an average of 85 to 90 times a year, and his career IsoD is .103, which is excellent. his minor league numbers also suggest a more patient approach than soto. i'm not saying that soto will be a hacking machine, and i think he could end up drawing 60 to 70 walks a year - he'd just fall a little short of posada. but you're right in that his power has to be respected. he doesn't look to be one of these patient guys with little power whose walk rate evaporates in the bigs because pitchers have no reason to fear them. also if soto keeps mashing, lou is going to have to think about bumping him up a spot in the order. though it's not a bad thing to have him hitting after good OBP guys like fukudome and derosa.