He's still not addressing the walk, which is the core of his OBP problem. He doesn't respect the walk as an offensive weapon. Agreed. The Cubs (Jim Hendry) still see the offensive problem as having to do with a failure to hit in the clutch / hit with RISP / as a straight hitting problem vs an on-base problem. Someone linked to a Dan Fox chat at Baseball Prospectus the other day. He received a lot of Soriano questions and, while answering a question about the Cubs' philosophy on free agents, he referred to a joint Baseball Digest / Bleed Cubbie Blue Blog interview with Jim Hendry this past August. Fox then wrote: You can read the full BP writeup at the link above. The Cubs were last in the NL and 29th out of 30 MLB teams in OBP last year ... so, sorry, Jim, you didn't manage to get too many guys on base. It's true that the Cubs needed to get more slugging, and Soriano should certainly help in that respect. But the quote reflects a continued tendency to dismiss OBP as strictly a function of hitting and to downplay the importance of getting on base as a function of scoring. His philosophy has not changed despite the Tribune opening up the wallet. They went out and signed Soriano and DeRosa because they hit, not because either has a demonstrated ability to get on base consistently. I'm not knocking either player ... but the OBP has to come from somewhere and Derrek Lee can't do it all by himself, as we saw in '05. I'm glad that the Tribune Co. is ramping up spending. But if the Cubs are to ever be consistently good, there has to be a fundamental change in how the front office views OBP. They have to start finding guys who can get on base, whether those guys are obtained through free agency or obtained through drafting / signing players into the farm system. They're trying to outspend their mistakes right now, but that can't last forever.