I'm in the Lilly will "not be great, but won't be bad" group. But I rather have him, then say....Jeff Suppan or Jason Marquis. My camp is expanding to: "Lilly=bad, Suppan & Marquis=also bad." They're average-ish guys who are likely to be even worse in Wrigley (especially Lilly). Not worth the money. Padilla would be almost worth the money, but I've heard of too many character issues with him. Pass. ok, so who do you want the cubs to get then? I know we're in a position where we can't be choosy. I also like to take the negative side too often. The only pitchers I've heard are available that are quality pitchers are Schmidt, Westbrook, and Jason Jennings. Jennings one year might've been an illusion, but I'd take a shot on him. Granted, Westbrook and Jennings won't come cheap. Westbrook might cost Pie. Lilly's health and pitching tendencies would make him a sizable risk. Walks and homers and a bad shoulder don't promise much. The odds, IMO, are greater that he'll be bad rather than good. If things went great, he might be a bad #2 starter. In a good case, he could be a decent #3. Most likely, he's a solid #4 pitching 1/2-3/4 of 4 seasons at $10M per. Just because there's not much on the market, do you tie up a roster spot and $10M a year for the next four years on what's likely an average pitcher, at best? Sometimes it's wiser to accept you can't recover from years of injuries and bad personnel decisions in one offseason. Spending isn't necessarily improving. And I'd actually take Suppan before Lilly, too. Neither will be a staff-saver, but Suppan can at least throw a ground ball.