There are no top tier starting pitchers out there. Taking a snapshot of this year's World Series teams and saying, "well, the Cubs have better X than them, therefore they don't need to improve it" is a baseless argument. In 2004 the Cubs had better pitching than Boston, and near identical pitching to STL. What did that get them? The only two playoff teams the Cubs scored more than this year were Houston and San Diego, the 6 other playoff teams all scored more. The contenders who fell just short all scored more runs. The Cubs were a bad team overall. They are also a $100m, top 5 payroll team. There is absolutely no excuse to put all their eggs into one basket and only address pitching, especially when it's the only area of the game where they have any sort of depth or any chance of filling holes from within. After Florida won the World Series, everybody said their team needed more speed to win. When Boston won, people were enamored with the 2 great starters/1 great closer theory. When Houston and the White Sox played this year, it was destined to cause a run on defensive baseball. Chasing the trend every year is a terrible way to build a baseball team. There is no one way to win in baseball. But the smart teams with money should try and get as good as possible in as many areas as possible. The only reason the Astros were a pitching team was that they didn't have the money to retain a solid lineup, as their more expensive players aged and some of their better players left. We need to quit pretending that the offense was just fine and dandy last year simply because they scored more runs than the NL pennant winner. In 2004 they weren't close to either World Series contender, while 6 of the 8 playoff teams scored more than the Cubs (with the early departing Dodgers/Twins as the only ones to score less), while at the same time, the Cubs were better than 7 of the 8 playoff teams at preventing the opposition from scoring. Offense matters. The Cubs can and should field a great offense and defense. There is no justification to even consider focusing only on one side or the other. You have to get in the playoffs first, then win in the playoffs. The best way to create a team that will get in the playoffs is by maximizing your expected runs scored and minimizing your expected runs allowed. I don't see Hendry going after a stud closer. There are no stud starters available. If they can somehow find a way to get rid of the Williams/Rusch combo and come up with somebody like Barry Zito to push Maddux to 5th starter, I'd be all for it. But they shouldn't just acquire pitching for pitching sake. A glut of mediore arms isn't going to make them a great pitching staff. While everybody in the league puts an extreme value on pitchers and thefore it's very hard to find and expensive to acquire, and defense has gone up in value the past year, it's the perfect time to acquire some offense. something to add: One year does not make a trend. Offense has been a problem for this team for many years. Pitching has not been. This has been a top 5 pitching staff in baseball 2 of the past 3 years. They've been a lower half scoring team every year. That's the trend that needs to be addressed most, not the "what won this year's World Series" trend.