They can't have a secret agreement in place that Ramirez gets traded, uses the escape clause and comes back to the Cubs, that would be tampering. He can have his mind set on doing so, but he can't have some agreement lined up w/ Hendry. And IMO, Ramirez should uses the escape clause, b/c Adrain Beltre has a 5-year 64M deal, and Ramirez has better #'s than Beltre. AND ARod makes 25-27/year in the last few years of his deal. ............but David Wright's only making $374,000. IMO, it's not a given that ARAM will make more then the 11 million he's already making. Rolen is right around that price, Glaus makes less, Chipper Jones makes 2 million/year more, Mike Lowell makes less, Eric Chavez makes less, Ensberg makes less, Blalock makes less, Mora makes less............. he's pretty comparable w/ other 3B. If he opts out, it's because he doesn't want to be a Cub.............. or the Cubs have traded him and he Wants to be a Cub. You are applying too much emotion to the decision. It is completely logical for ARam to opt out or at least "indicate" he is going to do so. Anyone can see that he is at the core of the Cubs offense (along with Lee and Barrett) and that his leaving would be a major problem for Hendry since he would now need to replace ARam and still further upgrade the offense to improve this year's woeful showing. With that in mind, any agent would want to use that leverage to upgrade the money and extend the years on the deal. It is a lot like Prior opting out this past offseason. Some fans wanted to read all sort of things into it about how he wanted out of the organization, but the fact is that it was the smart business move so he did it. Hendry will make a similar move with Wood. He will decline the team option knowing Wood can not get similar money elsewhere and then probably try to sign him to a lower cost deal. It is not about lack of loyalty, it is just good dollars and cents. It's not emotions. Simply stated, ARam makes more, or around what his peers make. Everyone that makes more then him w/ the exception of Beltre (Seattle paid way over for him, IMO) you could argue is AS GOOD, or BETTER then ARam. From a business outlook, you DON'T opt out if your happy where you're at and there's a good chance you could make the same or less then what your making now. How does that make sense? I like ARam and if he wants an extension he could probably just ask for one. If he opts out, he may or may not make more. I would venture to say that IF he makes more, it would be VERY LITTLE more. The difference between Prior and ARam is that ARam is making what he should be for his production. Prior arguably wasn't getting paid league averages for his production to that point.