That's because I don't act like a petulant child every single time the Cubs are outbid. The Adam Dunn thread was a classic example. No, it's because I don't care. Your ideas of what is a good deal or not means absolutely nothing. 1.) It's not a near miss. Not yet anyways. 2.) If you camped outside the front office and whined like you do around here, the Cubs would be floating a $300 mil payroll just to shut you up. That would be terrible, wouldn't it? Because big spending is bad for some reason. I don't want the Cubs to spend just to spend and get themselves into a hole; I want them to spend because they CAN spend because they SHOULD be able to spend. How is this possibly something you don't want as well? Like I said, if the Cubs are choosing not to spend significantly more but can, that's unfortunate. If they can't spend significantly more, that's even worse. Neither is something that anyone would want. First off, sorry about my previous post. I got frustrated and was a bit rude. By the time I thought to edit it, people had responded. I want the Cubs to spend. I've never implied anything other than that. But we don't have a new TV deal. We don't have a giant advertising board. The simple fact is that we can't spend like the Dodgers. Not yet anyways. Given our current team and the market, there are players that make sense. But we aren't talking about the playoffs without some very good luck. I've been pretty vocal supporting some big contracts. Darvish and some slight support for Pujols last offseason. Upton, Bourn, Sanchez this year. But the simple fact remains that the window is more 2014 and on. There will be opportunities to overpay every year. To justify getting guys now, the deals need to be reasonable — both in contract terms and risk.