More excuses. Hendry has had a top 5 payroll throughout his tenure, and thanks to much of his work as farm director last decade, he had a ton of talent at his disposal. All GMs have a tough job, but Hendry has not been in a tougher position than any other GM in the league. Fandom aside, I would have taken the Cubs job over just about any other the past 3 seasons simply because of what a great position they were in to succeed. A GM has to be judged on the collective results during his tenure, not individual trades, or just this year. I don't care about excuses about why he couldn't get a guy, or how a team wouldn't trade with him. Lots of people have known exactly what has held back this team from being great as opposed to above average (88/89 wins) or below average. And, SO FAR, Hendry has done nothing to fix that problem. It's up to him to solve the problem, not us to assume he'll get the job done. You can call it what you want but we are dealing with the here and now. If you can look back and point to his shortcomings will you also highlight his accomplishments? In your desire to make your point I guess it was lost on you that I didn't say he shouldn't be criticized but i do have a problem with the idea that he isn't trying to do anything. By the logic in your argument, it must be up to us to assume he won't get it done. If that's the case, we shouldn't be outraged (much less surprised) by any non deals. The difference between me and you is I'm not trying to tell you how to judge Hendry. I'm merely offering up the logic behind my judgement of Hendry as less than adaquate at his job, which is based on his inability to failure to fix glaring weaknesses for a very long time. What I don't get is why there are so many people out there who want to tear apart those of us who don't like the job Hendry has done. If you like what he's done, fine, I'll disagree with you, but my problem is with Hendry, not you. On the other hand, when somebody says something negative about Hendry, you get much more of an attack against the negative than real positive support for Hendry. I will assume Hendry will fail until he proves otherwise. 3 years ago he got the benefit of the doubt. After 2003 he got the benefit of the doubt. But this regime has shown me enough for me to have a pretty fair idea of what type of strategy they are trying to employ this offseason. Now, Hendry could blow me away with an acquisition for a very productive RF, and a series of moves to improved the longstanding lack of BB and OBP by the offense. And in that case, I'll be very happy to say I'm impressed with the job he's doing. But I can only judge Hendry on what he's accomplished so far on the job, that includes the past.