I see at least one other person here understands the concept of opportunity cost. The Furcal non-signing was a blessing. I was never in favor of signing him. I wasn't in favor of trading for Pierre. I always felt they had a quality lead off hitter in Todd Walker. Todd Walker and his 2.5m contract, plus his .350+ OBP is exactly what the doctor ordered. Not only does he get on base at a decent clip, but he provides some power to replace the speed he doesn't have. In a perfect world, Walker would have blazing speed to go with his other quality skills. Murton was a viable #2 option last year, and he was a viable option in that spot this year. The kid has great plate presence. He can use the whole field, and he too has a bit of pop in his bat. There was no need to go out and spend ridiculous amounts of money and minor league talent to improve the top of the order. The top two spots in the order could have been secured for less than 3m in salary. .350/.350 OBP in the top two spots and you still have Nolasco, Pinto and Mitre to use to beef up the rest of the line up, preferably with guys who show the same kind of patience as Murton and Walker, yet have a bit more pop in their bats. Would the Dodgers have traded Milton Bradley to the Cubs for one, two or three of the aforementioned guys (Nolasco, Pinto and Mitre)? Would Hill and one of those guys get the job done? Williams? Would taking Derrek Lowe and his big salary have gotten the job done? Lowe could have then been used in the rotation or in trade to acquire a difference maker. Bradley is cheap and productive. He's good defensively, on the base paths, and offensively. There were many other guys available that the Cubs could have traded or signed that would have provided more depth and strength to the offense. Not resigning Nomar was a huge mistake. Even if he missed a portion of the season, the offense he provides when he is healthy is definitely worth the 5m it would have costed to retain his services for one more year. He also provided protection in the event Cedeno wasn't ready to be an everyday SS yet, instead of having Neifi as the only option if Cedeno bombs. Nomar's willingness to switch positions made his value even more golden. As much as I have always liked Aramis, he's no guarantee to play everyday, either. Nomar provided protection in case Aramis had to miss significant playing time. That was a known fact prior to the offseason. So, to say that it's hindsight to know Lee would get hurt and miss time providing the golden opportunity to stick Nomar at 1st is not accurate. We needed Nomar as protection at SS if Cedeno sucked, in RF if we couldn't find anyone better than Jacque Jones to sign, 3b in case Aramis' groin or hamstring flared up again, etc.... Defense was an issue last year. No doubt. The Cubs defense this year has actually been pretty good (if you only look at errors), yet the team sucks. Signing guys who can catch the ball is a horrible organizational philosophy. Signing guys who are aggressive at the plate is a horrible organizational philosophy. Since the institution of this managerial group, they've made the playoffs one time, which was in 2003. That team made it to the playoffs behind a very healthy and successful pitching staff. The offense was mediocre that year. A better offense might have pushed that team even further. A better offense in 2004 might have helped overcome the injuries and ineffectiveness of the bullpen in 2004 and 2005. They have regressed so far offensively, there is no way they can count on this offense to win any games for them. The pitching staff now has to be perfect, or they will lose. It's painfully obvious to just about everyone watching this team that it takes strengths in offense, pitching, bullpen, bench and defense to win games. Sosa was horrible in RF in 2003 when the Cubs made the playoffs. HORRIBLE defensively. You don't need a gold glove at every position. Just look for places to improve where you can, but don't sacrifice offense to improve defense. The 2006 team had a golden opportunity to change the hitting philosophy and go with a .350+ OBP at just about every position in the line up. If you had Milton Bradley playing CF, Abreu or someone of his skills playing RF, Nomar sharing time in LF with Murton, then the loss of Derrek Lee at 1b for a quarter of the season isn't nearly as catastrophic as it turned out to be with John Mabry or Neifi Perez filling in in his abscence. Nomar moves to 1b and all is not lost. Instead of having Freddy Bynum, Neifi Perez, Jerry Hairston and any other 2b I'm not thinking of, they could have gone with someone decent offensively on the bench. A Kevin Millar type. A guy you can stick out in the field somewhere and not lose a whole lot offensively. Hendry put himself in this position, and for that he needs to go. I cannot sit here and root and cheer blindly for a horrible organizational philosophy. Signing toolsy players with speed that can catch the ball ignores what really scores a lot of runs over the course of a long season. BASERUNNERS!