A measurable amount, huh? How much, exactly, would that be? I'm also curious to hear your explanation of why "the crapshoot thing" is overstated. If Miller and/or Chapman were on the team, would we have won the NLCS last year? What if the April/May version of this team is what we see in the postseason? We won 11-4 in series matchups in April/May (with one tie). That equates to .733333 of series matchups we won. What difference would Miller and/or Chapman have made, and is that worth Kyle Schwarber? If we trade Schwarber (which I would prefer doesn't happen), shouldn't we address that lack of pitching depth instead and get a controllable TOR pitcher? That contribution would be far greater, both this year and in the future. I would prefer a TOR starter also, but is that even an option? Who is it? I do think Games 2 and 3 of the NLCS might have turned out differently, or maybe starters would have thrown less and been more fresh. I don't think talking about last year's NLCS is especially meaningful. I think crapshoot is overstated because it isn't totally random, just difficult to predict. The impact of a dominating bullpen in a few short games could have a huge effect. Some games it might have none. But I don't think it makes any sense to say you don't have a better chance to win a short series with a dominating pen than without based on it being a crapshoot. Absolutely you have a better chance. I'm not the guy to put math to it though and I can see arguments to say its minimal. Its nonsense to say "its a crapshoot so it doesn't matter" though. When you're playing good teams, runs can be extremely important and having Chapman pitch the 6th instead of Travis Wood could swing the series.