That's not trading high, that's fleecing somebody. Trading high is trading at a point when you can get the highest return. You could trade Neifi Perez tomorrow for a B prospect and you'd be getting more than equal value, but that doesn't mean you traded high. Again - I guess we disagree. I'm not saying you fleece someone. I'm saying you're getting more than what a guy is worth based on recent performance or whatever else. Not every trade where one side pays more than a guy's actual value is a fleecing. And your Neifi example is irrelevant to the points I'm making; I've never suggested trading worthless players for good prospects. Trading JJ now or JP now would truly be "selling high" to me. Besides, if you trade someone for a player of essentially equal value, you haven't improved your team (unless that player plays a position of need and you're trading from a position of excess). The Cubs don't have a lot of solid hitting Cs, so trading Barrett only improves the team if you get more than he's worth. I don't think you will. Wow. Ok - sorry for my mischaracterization. So he's been catching for 6 years. For a 29 (near 30) year old, that's not all that long. Given that many Cs caught in HS if not before, that's probably at least 5 if not 10+ years of catching that he hasn't done relative to other ML Cs. So my point still stands: the sharp decline at 30 that someone pointed out earlier may not apply here. Is it possible for Barrett to decline much more from a defensive standpoint? He's not very good.