Age isn't the reason I don't want Damon. Although it plays a part. Damon's game is based largely on speed, and speed is a young man's game. Giles OBP/SLG game is much more adaptable to an aging body. But the main reason I would want Giles more than Damon is Giles blows him away in the production department. But this isn't a fair comparison. They don't play the same position (meaning there is not a competition for one or other and they are not mutually exclusive) and they don't bring any of the same values to the table. For production, compare Giles to another outfielder that produces. Damon is a leadoff hitter, what type of production are you expecting? As a leadoff hitter, he brings hits, OBP, respectable speed, and runs. He has scored 100+ runs per season for 8 consecutive years. Honestly, I don't see why Giles and Damon are compared for production. They represent two seperate needs for the Cubs (a leadoff hitter and 4/5 hole hitter, CF and RF) and they represent the top FA for their services at each respective position. The Cubs need production, plain and simple. They can plug Murton, Walker or Cedeno into the leadoff spot if they want. They need production, most importantly OBP production. Giles can be a 2 hole hitter wiith a .400 OBP, and solve any perceived problem for leadoff*. Damon is only a leadoff hitter because his manager put him there. He doesn't have to be one, he certainly isn't an ideal one. Production is needed, no matter what spot in the order it comes from. If the Cubs find the money for Damon and Giles, I wouldn't be upset, but if they pass on Giles and go hard after Damon, that would be incredibly stupid. Giles is the better player, and by all accounts will cost less. *to clarify. If Giles is putting up a .400 OBP in the 2 hole, you don't need a super star leadoff hitter. A simple .330-.340 OBP would more than suffice. Between those two spots, Lee and Ramirez would get plenty of RBI opportunities.