I never went away. I've always felt that when a club is going good, no one person should get all the credit and when they're going bad, no one person should get all the blame. All World Series champions have to smart, willing to spend, healthy, and lucky. Epstein deserves credit for bringing together a group of guys who blended together and pulled off something that many of us old-timers didn't think we would ever see. The fact Hendry wasn't able to deliver a WS championship doesn't mean he is as horrible as some people portrayed him. Hendry was pretty damn bad. And granted some of it was him being hampered by the Tribune Company and Sam Zell's ownership (no idea how people can even muster a complaint about the Ricketts family and spending after dealing with that) but there's a reason Hendry didn't get a GM job after he was fired. Hendry was bad, but also a bit hampered by the mom and pop operation the Cubs were running at the time. I remember all the stuff when Theo took over about having the smallest FO, least number of scouts, still receiving season ticket orders by fax, etc. His biggest issue in my mind is that he failed to draft/sign and develop virtually any talent after Prior, Wood and Zambrano. Is that because they had lack of scouting resources? Or because Hendry hired a terrible scouting director that made mindblowingly bad 1st round picks? Or because the Cubs were not spending on the draft like other large market teams who were using exploits in the system to acquire ridiculous amounts of talent? My point is that there was a lot that went into his failure and I'm not convinced its entirely his fault (though a lot was)