what part of hill's numbers don't look dominant? and he may be older than crawford, but he's got a lot less service time, so he's considerably cheaper. How long will Hill be considerably cheaper? How much money is he going to get in arbitration for the 2009 and 2010 season? The 2008 season Hill will make about 5 million less, but I question how much less he will make once he hits arbitration before the 09 season. Suppose Hill gets $3 his first season of arbitration (if he gets more than that, you're going to be very, very sorry you traded him for Carl Crawford). By that time, Crawford will have either forced you to trade him or forced you to sign an extension of more than $10 per season, possibly closer to $15 per. I don't really understand how Crawford is going to force a trade with 2 years left on his deal. He may want an extension, but he'll have to wait until during the 2010 season to get it. Under the previous CBA, veterans traded in the middle of a long term contract could demand a trade after one season with the new club. If the new team failed to trade the player, the player would be granted free agency. Traded players typically used this right to negotiate a high-dollar extension. The new CBA has done away with this, but, since Crawford signed his contract under the old CBA, he still has this right. This is why Crawford has far, far more value to the Rays than he'd have for any team trading for him and why their demands supposedly seem so out of line.