spending the money isn't the only thing that matters, they also have to identify the right talent and then develop it properly. the complete lack of patience that is rampant throughout the cubs' entire organization shows that something has been done wrong the last few years - either they're drafting the wrong players or not developing the players properly. or probably some of both. Patience is not the only aspect they should be worried about, and it's not the only prerequisite to have. 1/3 of the starting players the Cubs have developed themselves on the ML roster (Soto, Barney, Castro) knows how to take a walk. Another is one of the best offensive SSs in baseball despite not ideal patience. You'll also note that the best of the Cubs hitters and prospects have a tendency to not K...and if they do K they usually walk...except for Soriano...Otherwise Ramirez, Lee, Soto, Castro, Vitters, Barney, Jackson, DeVoss, LeMahieu, Flaherty, and from scouting reports Baez and Vogelbach...etc....All guys who are really good at making contact and if they're not great at that then they take walks (Lee, Soto, Jackson, Flaherty, whoever I'm forgetting). If they sign a Pujols/Fielder, then they're signing guys who walk a whole lot and don't really K a ton. I think the whole walks thing is overblown nowadays. It was a much larger problem under old ownership, but I'm less worried about it under Ricketts. He's shown a respect for the saber side of the game (first hire was Kaplan IIRC), and the system has far more interesting position prospects than they've had in a long time. So while we're not the foremost authority on producing ideally patient players, the Cubs have taken steps towards improving their position/hitter development if you're looking to see the steps. I assume most aren't and will only catch on once the ML team starts winning (which is the core of the many issues anyway). I like the contact aggressive approach to hitting the Cubs seem to be taking on...It's one every team wants anyway, and the only reason patience got so specifically emphasized in the first place is that for a while teams undervalued the crap out of it. Now everyone knows patience can be a very valuable aspect to a hitter's game. It's time to expand that idea, and alot of the best teams have already done that.