The thing about Mutron that I like is his bat speed. IMO, he'll always hit for a decent to high average, and with his plate discipline he will be a valuable player. The main problem, IMO is the outdated idea that a corner outfielder must hit a high number of HRs. His swing is not likely to do that. He's a line drive hitter who will hit lots of doubles but not a lot of HRs. With a guy like Murton in LF a team will have to look for power somewhere else. For that reason, I think he'll have a long career with a lot of teams. I don't think many Baseball Men who played The Game will have the foresight to build a team without a power hitter in a traditional power hitting position. I don't think that idea is outdated at all. You need to get power in your lineup, and LF is at the bottom of the defensive spectrum, making it easier to stash a big bat there. Obviously it's not an absolute, but if you have a player that struggles to get to an .800 OPS like Murton, it puts a lot of stress on positions that it's much more difficult to get offense from. I understand where you are coming from, but if you have a guy like Murton, you have to think a little differently. He's not in Tony Gwyn's class but Gwynn was a corner outfielder. George Brett wasn't a HR hitter, neither was Don Mattingly, for the most part. Obviously, I'm not suggesting that Murton will have a career like those three but two of the three guys played on WS teams. Edit: I just saw the Andrew Jones talk in transactions. Trade for Jones and work out a deal with Aramis. Then you have three legitimate power hitters: CF, 3rd, 1st. Throw a boat load of cash at Soriano and put him at 2nd and you'd have four. Murton Soriano Lee A.Jones Aramis Barrett JJ Izturas That would be a pretty decent every day line up. Nice line-up, but that is adding at least an extra 40 million (Jones, Soriano and Lee) to payroll without addressing pitching. I'm all for it, but I don't see the Tribune opening up the checkbook that much.