I don't really feel that the chances are too great, considering all our hopes rest on Prior/Wood/Zambrano and not on acquiring an impact bat. If Prior/Wood/Zambrano are all healthy for a full season and produce like we know they can, we don't need Abreu to make the playoffs and potentially win a WS. If they're not all healthy, Abreu isn't going to get us to the WS. That is some extremely backward thinking. Prior Wood and Zambrano were all healthy and effective in 2003, and it led to an 88 win team. Why? Because the offense was mediocre due almost exclusively to the low BB/OBP numbers. If you feel the chances aren't great to capitalize on those guys in the next couple years, then you might as well advocate trading them all. That's pure silliness in my opinion. It's silly to say that the success of 2006 depends on our rotation? Abreu isn't the last piece to the puzzle, so why trade away your best prospect for him? his age is the primary factor, IMO. you're basically trading away the future for a shot at the next two years with Abreu. Zambrano and Prior are going to be re-signed long term and they're both young. it would be nice to win in the next two years, but we have too many holes and too many things that can go wrong (and are likely too, like Wood's arm falling off) to take a chance on Abreu, who isn't a long term solution. You are saying two different things. You are saying the team needs the pitching to be healthy to win, but then you are following that up with a "we shouldn't waste our time going after an impact bat because it's all about the pitching and offense doesn't matter." It makes no sense. It's silly. If this was Pittsburgh, and they didn't have the money to go after an impact bat, and had to rely on career years from pitchers, well, then just sit back and hope for those career years because your options are limited. But this is not the 1999 Cubs, when it made no sense to trade prospects for bats, because that team was so bad. This team does not have so many holes that an impact bat couldn't make a difference. They could conceivably be better in 2005 at every single offensive position except 1B, depending on who Hendry gets for the OF. Last year's pitching decline hurt, but it was sharp decline from the success of the early 2000s. It is quite possible to improve the pitching with minor tweaks, but impossible to improve this offense with tweaks. They need an impact bat. And Pie is not untradable. I was a staunch "keep them all" guy in the late 90's and early 00's, but keeping that same attitude now, when the window of opportunity is closing on the "our best pitchers are outperforming their contracts" era would be quite foolish. Pie is no better prospect than any of the top prospects of the 97-02 hayday of Cubs prospect lists. Sure he's got value, but much of that value is what he can get this team via trade. He won't contribute to this team for at least a year, and even then probably won't be all that good. Now is not the time to be concerned with the 2008-2012 Cubs. As long as Hendry doesn't completely handicap this team's future with a list of asinine deals, those teams will take care of themselves. 2006-2007 matter most of all right now, much more than 1999-2002 mattered going into those seasons. If you don't want to trade Pie, fine. But don't make up some goofy excuse that pitching health is the only thing that will helpl this team win, therefore they shouldn't make a move to fill the biggest need on this team.