You get a different sense of things if you look at the none on/men on splits year by year. Over his last five seasons: 2002 Overall - .300/.332/.547/.879 None on (464 ABs) - .287/.322/.550/.872 Men on (232 ABs) - .328/.353/.543/.896 2003 Overall - .290/.338/.525/.863 None on (439 ABs) - .305/.348/.569/.917 Men on (243 ABs) - .263/.320/.444/.764 2004 Overall - .280/.324/.484/.808 None on (358 ABs) - .265/.308/.480/.788 Men on (250 ABs) - .300/.345/.488/.833 2005 Overall - .268/.309/.512/.821 None on (349 ABs) - .292/.340/.547/.887 Men on (288 ABs) - .240/.273/.469/.742 2006 Overall - .277/.351/.560/.911 None on (435 ABs) - .278/.326/.556/.882 Men on (212 ABs) - .274/.396/.566/.962 His career splits with nobody on vs. with men on are really skewed by two seasons (2003 when he had a good year and 2005 when he had a mediocre year). Of those five seasons, though, he actually had a higher OPS with men on base compared to nobody on in three of the five seasons. And that includes his career year, when he had a significantly higher OPS with men on base than he did when he came up with the bases empty (mainly because of a huge increase in walks). I really don't think there's any real statistical foundation to the belief that he's just a better hitter batting leadoff than hitting in the middle of the order. The idea that he can only do well batting leadoff just took off earlier, yet I have yet to see anything that makes me believe there is anything actually behind it. I don't see how breaking it down by year changes the fact that his OPS over his career is significantly higher with nobody on base. Solo homers offend my sensibilities too but that doesn't mean I have to ignore reality. The bottom line is that if they keep winning, he's probably gonna stay there, and I bet we can all agree that would be just fine. Those numbers show that his career splits do a pretty poor job of telling the whole story. While he may have better stats overall throughout his career with the bases empty than with men on base, if you look at the last five seasons, he was actually better with men on in three of those seasons than with the bases empty. Yet because his splits in the other two seasons were more pronounced, his overall numbers show him hitting better with the bases empty. What breaking them down by seasons shows, though, is that you cannot assume that he hit better with the bases empty throughout his career. Across his career, yes, but not throughout. Not when he actually hit better with men on base more often than he did with the bases empty over the last five seasons. As a hypothetical, let's say his OPS was .200 points higher with the bases empty in one season but in the other four seasons, his OPS was .020 higher with men on. While his overall splits would show him hitting better with the bases empty, would that accurately reflect how he hits in those situations? I'd be more likely to look at the other four seasons where his numbers were right around his overall line for each of those seasons and see that as what we should expect. The fact he actually hit better with men on during his career season probably carries a little bit more weight with me, as well. So yes, it may be a fact that he hit better with the bases empty over his career thus far, but it's also a fact that he hit better with runners on base more often (at least on the scale of a full season) than he did with the bases empty over the last five seasons. The statistical support for the idea that he has to hit leadoff just isn't there. BA DA BING! Thanks for posting THE facts. Paying a guy $136 million over 8 years to be your leadoff hitter when he has the potential to hit 40-50 homers a year is beyond stupidity. Words can't describe it adequately.