literally hundreds. oh, wait, he had like a .230 slugging %? probably not very many then. my bad. 1) already been said....scroll up 2) he proably had nothing to do with the Cubs winning the division or going to the playoffs considering he was 3rd in runs on the team (80), was one of six Cubs players who had over 100 hits (143) 3) remember when Alfonso was a 40/40 guy and this year he had 19 SB's in 135 games when Theriot had 28 in 148.. oh we paid Soriano 10,000,000 in 2007 to be our "leadoff man", tell me that theriot isn't worth that cost 4) this guy shouldnt be given a chance because hes a utility player, yeah right thats what Ronny Cedeno and the guy we just traded away Omar Infante is 2. You're praising him for 80 runs scored? That's actually low considering how often he hit in the first and second spots in the order. Most players with a respectable OBP would have had a lot more with Lee and Ramirez hitting behind them. And just about any major league hitter will get 100 hits if given as many plate appearances as Theriot. Most would get there in a lot less plate appearances. 3. Stealing bases doesn't make you a good leadoff hitter. Soriano brings much more to the table than Theriot, including getting on base more often in 2007. 4. Let me see if I get this straight...the Cubs should give Theriot another shot despite a bad season at age 27, but Ronny Cedeno is a utility player based on a bad season at age 23 (which was his only legitimate shot at starting full-time)? I'm not saying Cedeno will blossom into an All-Star, but his ceiling is so much higher than Theriot's. Theriot is a utility player. He can fill in for a couple weeks without hurting the team when someone goes down with an injury. I don't think many people would have a problem with him being a bench player for the Cubs, but he shouldn't be starting everyday.