I have to disagree. I think If the managment shuts their traps, and deals with it in house, his trade value is higher. Yes he was in a decline. But He was still Slammin Sammy. Despite the fact he only hit in the low 200's, he still had quite a few HR's. I'm sure alot of teams would accept the lower average for the power. The club decided to make him into CLUBHOUSE CANCER SAMMY SOSA, however, and i beleive that hurt his value. G/ BA/ OBP/ SLG/HR 2002: 150/.288/.399/.594/49 2003: 137/.279/.358/.553/40 2004: 126/.253/.332/.517/35 Sosa's batting average wasn't the only thing to decrease. His OBP shrunk, and so did his slugging percentage. Not to mention that he was spending less and less time on the field. He still had some power, but I don't think that he qualified as a top power hitter anymore. Besides, with his low batting average and OBP the trade off was becoming less acceptable. There was definitely some room to hope that he would recover somewhat and have a good, injury free year, but considering his age, his contract, and his consistent and sharp decline, I don't think we would have gotten anyone to eat most of his contract, even if he wasn't labeled a clubhouse cancer. Tell me honestly, if these were the numbers put up by some random player, would you pay $17,000,000 or more and give up any kind of real talent to acquire him? That is pretty much all I have on this argument, except for one thing. I have five posts so far, and I don't even get a welcome to NSBB? :D