The Sox already had plenty of power. Lee is the better offensive player when it comes to HR and RBI and AVG but what Podsednik gave the Sox was a player who could manufacture runs, a player who could beat out an infield hit (40 in 2005, 16 of those bunts), a player who could get on base (.419 OBP leading off the game in 2005) in the first inning and be at 2B by the time the meat of the order came up. He was the spark for the Sox in '05 and the offense suffered when he was out with an injury later in the year, which almost cost the Sox. Pods reminded my alot of what Bobby Dernier did for the Cubs in '84. So say what you will about old baseball traditional positions but there is a reason why they are traditions.....it's because they work more often than not and in 2005, it worked like a charm. I guess infield hits are better than outfield hits? Most of those "stats" are horrible. He had 40 IF hits...so what? He only had 117 outfield hits. IF hits are likely less valuable than OF hits as at most they can only move the runner up one base. Either way he hit .290. .419 OBP leading off the game? What a fluke stat...unless of course you are telling me that he spent so much energy trying to get on base to begin the game that he was unable to get on base at a proficient clip the rest of the game. Either way, he got on base at a .351 clip.