This is extremely unfair. Ramirez is hurt now, so he can't run well. Wood's had arm problems, so he hasn't always been able to pitch. Those things are true. However, when healthy, Wood goes all-out all the time. Ramirez? Maybe it's just me, but I seem to remember plenty of times where he didn't bother running to first after a ground-out or when he was slow getting out of the box because he was admiring his hit (On that, didn't he get thrown out at second this year in St. Louis on what should have been a sure double because he was watching his shot?). Ramirez is one of my favorite Cubs. He's been a god-send at third. I hesitated to post in this thread because a) I didn't start posting here to bash players and b) I didn't want the reputation of some drunken, off-the-cuff talk radio fan. Thinking Wood should pitch through pain is pretty ridiculous, IMO. But expecting a player (when healthy, mind you) to run hard all the time is not -- and Ramirez doesn't always do so. When's the last time Ramirez was fully healthy? And please explain how you can be sure. Obviously, I can't be sure. Maybe he has been playing injured every single time he's failed to run hard. I don't know, I couldn't. I have seen him run hard, quite a few times, actually. But I've also seen him not run hard -- and here I don't mean just in the last few weeks/months. If we've seen him run hard, we know he has been capable of it at some point in his career, so is it logical to assume every single time he hasn't run hard that he was injured? Again, I can't answer that with certainty, but it would seem unlikely. Surely you would agree that he's failed to go all-out even before this most recent injury (which you seem to imply by your question). Regardless, this is why I hesitated to post in this thread. I have so little desire for an argument in which I'm on the side of complaining about a Cub. I don't want that -- heck, I just stood up for Ramirez when he was called not "outstanding." In this situation, however, it seemed like respected, long-time posters were picking on a relative new-comer for saying something that has some merit.