What adds to this is that a lot of the fans bust their butt in the workplace to make a pittance of what professional ballplayers make and have no patience for a player who doesn't give 100% effort to play a game. I'm not making a judgment on Ramirez one way or another here, but am just trying to give some perspective as to the reasons some fans have the viewpoints that they do. And yet a lot of the complainers don't really bust their own butts 100% of the time, but they get all sanctimonious when complaining about ballplayers because it makes themselves feel better. Totally agree. The "I bust my butt in the workplace" defense is a joke. No one is balls to the wall 100% of the time at work. NO ONE. But whenever this sort of topic is brought up, everyone is a dynamo. Just a "devil's advocate" idea here - personally, I'll take Ramirez's offensive production at the cost of an occasional jog down the line - but what percentage of the time does a ballplayer actually "bust his butt"? Basically only when running the bases or when a defensive play involves him. (Add slightly more butt-busting for a first baseman and considerably more for a catcher) If someone gets offended that a player (in this case Ramirez) can't or won't run hard for the 6 seconds or so it takes to get down the first base line (he IS slow, mind you :D ), is that really so wrong? Even if you challenge the work ethic of those who challenge Ramirez's, it can be assumed that the average fan busts his butt at his job for at least 6 seconds, 3 or 4 times per workday, can't it? I don't know if the "bust your butt crew" goes that deeply into the thought process, but that's the only justification I can think of for it, other than simple economic jealousy.