Not at all. At least not from my perspective. He's a nice hitter, for a 2B, but his defense has always been a problem. It's more of an explanation for why so few teams seem interested in him... I also dispute that the Cubs have screwed him. I remember hearing the guy from Baseball Solutions.com on the radio rattle off the numbers about 2B . Walker was the worst 2B in the MLs at turning the double play in 2003. He platooned in 2004 and was injured for part of 2005 so I don't think he's improved in that area. I think teams are taking those things into consideration. Certainly, if he were a hot item he would have been traded already. Defense is not a static ability. Like hitting people have good year's and bad years. Walker had a very bad year defensively in '03, and was better in '04 and '05. Still below average, but not the travesty that people are making his defense to be. In fact, very similar to Juan Pierre in CF. It might not be static but he is still a below average defender. One could argue that Pierre's defense will improve now that he's playing half of his games in a cozy ballpark. However, I don't think there is a senario where Walker's defense can be improved dramatically. Walker's defense is not that bad. Besides with the Cubs staff, defense is even less of a premium (high K and high BB). The Cubs didn't loose last year because they couldn't play defense at 2nd. This idea that no team wants Walker b/c he can't play defense is shaky to me. First, how many teams are in the market for a 2nd baseman? Second, given Walker's value in terms of contract and production, one would have to think Hendry is asking for a fair trade. Maybe teams don't see the upside of trading a valuable piece of the future for a one year rental. If Hendry didn't want Walker then he shouldn't have picked up the option. A lot of balls have gotten through the infield that shouldn't and the Cubs constantly fail to turn DPs. Walker (nicknamed "the statute" in Boston for his lack of mobility) is a big part of this and it is one of those things that really ticks off pitchers. For instance, Mark Prior is better than league average in every category except for the percentage of ground balls that become base hits. In other words, a ground ball off Prior has a greater chance of developing into a single than a ground ball off of the average pitcher. Is it because ground balls get hit with more authority off Prior or is it because his defense fails him on the mound? As for Hendry. the GM's job is to do what is best for the team and that isn't always going to be what's best for the player. If I'm Hendry, I pick up Walker's option even if I don't plan to start him and even if I think the team might be better by trading him. Clearly, Hendry isn't planning on giving him away and Walker could become a valueable bargaining chip if someone's second baseman goes down during the year. Besides, it's not too late for Walker to prove his value to the club. The more competition, the better the position.