Of course, and I understand that. BA is NOT a king stat. No stat is. Using numbers like OBP/OPS, and other saber driven models...is a way of analyzing player value, but not the only way. There is no player more polarizing in these situations than Dunn, because he plays heavily to those numbers, while lacking in many other areas. Like I said...if he comes at a decent enough price, bring him along. But if we are talking some sort of multiyear, 13-15mil per year deal...pass. I've given my reasons why, people disagree. That's fine. But these numbers are NOT the only factor in determining his value to this team...far from it. OPS and OBP are not "saber driven models" though. In basically every situation, OPS overrides BA because OPS takes into consideration what BA tells you and then tells you even more on top of that. BA tells you simply how often a guy gets a hit - not what type or anything else. OPS, on the other hand, tells you what kind of hit the player has executed and how often he gets on base. So if you're going to point out one stat, OPS is probably your best bet without getting heavily into saber stuff (sorry for the lack of technical terminology). Looking at Dunn's BA in the situations you describe is less valuable than looking at his OPS - and his OPS is quite good in those situations. I appreciate what you are trying to say...you don't need to explain it to me. I completely understand what that stat is telling me. We just disagree on the value of BA w/RISP...that's all. I'm not some sort of anti-OPS, all original baseball stats guy. I just prefer not to rely solely on these statistics. I've seen quite a bit of Dunn actually...probably more than most people here. I got to watch him every night here in AZ, as I would watch D-Backs games while listening to Cubs games. And obviously, I've seen quite a bit of him while in a Reds uniform. He drives me ape balls crazy. Sometimes, I just want a guy to walk up to the plate looking to drive in a run because a situation dictates that need. And sometimes, you need to adjust your hitting approach to do so. Dunn simply refuses to do that, and it bothers me. Now, one positive you could take from this approach is putting him in front of a guy who DOES look to drive in runs when needed, like A-Ram (2007-08 playoffs aside, of course. :banghead: ) In that case, Dunn's patience would be beneficiary to us, and I wouldn't mind it whatsoever. So if the price is right...OK. Sure. The outfield defense would look damned awful, but the lineup would be nice.