WHAT?!? Williams is at least as valuable as Lidge? Please, let's hear this argument... Williams(or other SP) is going to pitch 3 times as many innings as Lidge will in a given season. Therefore, even though his performance isn't as dominant as Lidge's, he's worth more to the team because the quantity outweighs the marginal difference in quality. Wow. Only here could Williams be classified with Lidge. The tradition of WAY overvaluing Cubs players and prospects is alive and well. So, your logic is that Williams is as valuable as Lidge because of the innings he eats? I guess the same could be said for Rusch as well then, right? And, the suggestion that there is only a marginal difference in quality is a joke. In around 50 less innings, Lidge won only two fewer games than Williams, struck out many more hitters, had a much lower ERA, and a considerably lower WHIP in 2005. All is true for their 3 year averages, as well. Yes, Williams is younger. No, he isn't (in any way, shape, or form) comparable to one of the most dominant closers in the game. You really wouldn't trade Williams for Lidge? You'd be crazy. Williams is a dime a dozen. Lidge is one of about 4 or 5. Several teams have a Williams. Very few have a Lidge. People here really wouldn't trade Williams for Lidge? :roll: It's not just Williams, it's any starter of a certain ability. There's a reason that Lidge was behind Suppan and Maddux in Win Shares; or that he was 100th among pitchers in VORP, trailing Vazquez by a hair. Lidge is an outstanding reliever, one of the best. But he can only dominate for 70 or so innings. On the whole, someone who can give you pretty good production for 200 or so will be more valuable, whether that's Jerome Williams, Jeff Suppan, or Kirk Saarloos. It's also about precieved value, there isn't a GM in baseball that would rather have Williams over Lidge. Besides guys like Lidge are A LOT harder to find than Williams. I thought you weren't in to VORP. Aren't rate stats your thing anyway? I wasn't talking about perceived value, obviously most teams would jump at the concept of trading someone like Williams for Lidge, although as Blueheart pointed out, it doesn't make sense with the current Cubs team. And yes, I'm a big rate stats guy. But when you're comparing a starter to a reliever, where the differennce in playing time can be 3x as many as the other player, cumulative stats are necessary to illustrate the actual value the reliever has. A difference between 200+ innings and 70+ innings is much different than Tejada playing 160 games and Ramirez playing 140, which was the topic earlier when I preferred rate stats. I understansd the more innings point but I'll take a dominant relief ace over an average starter any day. Dominant players at their respective positions are hard to find.