In his career, Soriano's OPS with the bases empty is .862. With runners on, it's .799 and with RISP it's .770. So no matter where in the lineup you hit him, he becomes a worse hitter with men on base, and it makes little sense to move him down in the order in hopes of getting men on in front of him, thus making him a worse hitter. In comparison, Ramirez has an .804 lifetime OPS with the bases empty, .858 with runners on, and .870 with RISP (.998 with them loaded btw). Lee goes .864 -- .867 -- .884. Just for fun, Manny Ramirez: .951 -- 1.062 -- 1.067. Now there's a guy who should never lead off. Soriano should, unless you want to make him less effective. Also, with all the money the Cubs have blown on the Rusches and Neifis and Joneses and Izturisises of the world, it's nice for once that they overpaid for someone who's actually productive, whether he's truly "worth it" or not.