No it wasn't. It was a setback to teams that are willing to spend more in the draft. The Cubs were one of a few organizations in that position. It impacts some more than others based on current strategies, sure. We view it as particularly detrimental to the Cubs because we finally had a management team and ownership that wanted to focus on pouring more money into the draft. But it still impacts every team, and it definitely impacts teams like the Rays, Pirates and Royals more than us, because they can't fall back on building a huge scouting base as opposed to collecting as many picks as possible. How the hell can it be a setback to teams that had no interest in overspending in the first place? If the White Sox fired Kenny Williams today and replaced him with Dan Evans or someone else who actually wants to focus on building through the draft, the new CBA immediately presents a problem for them, just like it did for the Cubs. My whole point is that, while this alters the short-term strategy for the Cubs, it ultimately affects the decisionmaking for all teams, whether they are choosing to utilize overspending right now or not. And as someone else mentioned, numerous teams were picking up on this practice anyways (including the Cubs). In the end, the CBA probably works in our favor, but it's going to take a bit longer to develop a pipeline through the draft.