Agreed. We had 1 season of decent 3B play between Santo and Aramis (Madlock) and people are ready to ship Aramis anywhere. 3B in baseball is a giant pile of crap right now. With so many other holes on this team, might as well ride Aramis as long as possible. What do you consider decent? Maybe not great, but I'd think the following were all at least decent. 1983 - Cey 658 PAs , .805 OPS, 118 OPS+ 1986 - Cey 306 PAs, .891 OPS, 138 OPS+ Lopes 191 PAs, .908 OPS, 144 OPS+ Trillo 172 PAs, .740 OPS, 99 OPS+ 1993 - Buechelle 520 PAs, .782 OPS 110 OPS+ Plus quite a few years where the 3B had OPS+ over 100. Again, I'm in no way saying these were great seasons (although the 86 team had really good output from 3B), but they weren't crap either. As a side note, in looking at B-R for these numbers, when I saw the batting stats from 1993 I was surprised they were a 4th place team, granted they did win 84 games. Then I saw their pitching stats for that season. How did they finish over .500 when their best starter was Greg Hibbard, with the 100 ERA+ and 1.340 WHiP. Their best starter!? Shouldn't pretty much every 3B in MLB have an OPS+ over 100 when accounting for all of the terrible offensive players at SS, 2B, and C, at least theoretically? Besides that 1986 platoon, which was good, the others are still pretty bad production wise for 3B, historically an above average offensive position. Looking at 1980-1990 on Fangraphs, if my count was right, there were 15 3B that had an OPS above .800 for the decade out of 200+ that played there. 6 of those were qualified 3B, Boggs, Schmidt, Brett, Pedro Guerrero, Molitor and Bonilla. Notice any similarities among 4 of those 6? 3B just isn't as offensive based as you would think. There have been many that were, the four above examples plus others like Matthews and Santo. But overall, offensively, the position has had much more in common with middle infielders and catchers than the OF and 1B. Look at Graig Nettles and Brooks Robinson. Both were thought of as great all around 3B. Guys that could hit very well and were excellent fielders. And they were both good hitters for 3B. But, look at their numbers. Nettles had a career 110 OPS+ and B Robinson had a 104. Both fairly pedestrian. And they were considered very good, but not great, with the bat. You're comparing a bunch of years where the Cubs had average 3B production to a guy that should be in the HoF and was one of the best hitters of his generation, let alone for his position, and a guy that has been a top 3-5 3B for the last (almost) 10 years. Santo was a great hitter, period. When looking at 3B he's one of the best ever. ARam has been very, very good since he joined the Cubs. You have two outliers at that position bookending a bunch of average (for the position). That's really not fair. I'm not saying people should be happy and not try to improve on a .750 OPS from 3B. But, that shouldn't be looked as as horrible either. That's really pretty close to what one would expect an average 3B to produce.