The other problem is that a number of people (not everyone in this thread, mind you) are assuming that Lee was going to be able to reproduce, or at the very least come close to reproducing, his 2005 season. This is not a given by any stretch of the imagination; I don't care if you're a believer in statistics, psychology, shamanism, or Thor's influence in baseball. Everyone knew he was having a career year with those eye-popping numbers. I truly think it's unfair to place so much of this team's burden on Lee's shoulders. When he was out, a large number of people said this team's lack of offensive output was due to his absence. While there is plenty of credence in that statement, there are much better arguments regarding this team's lack of offensive success, even with Lee out of the lineup. How much better (offensively speaking) would this team be if they didn't have one of the worst hitters of this generation (Neifi) getting significant playing time? How about the terrible offensive output from Mabry, Cedeno, and Izturis? What about Pierre's and A-Ram's miserable slumps to start the season? Even if you give this team an extra ten wins with a healthy Lee, they would still have finished the season under .500 and out of the playoffs. I really hope Jim Hendry looks at this lineup and realizes that it needs some significant upgrades rather than keeping it intact, hoping they will eventually gel. Unless your starting pitching is eye-poppingly good (which our current rotation is not), the following lineup will not get your team above .500: Juan Pierre Cesar Izturis Derrek Lee Aramis Ramirez Jacque Jones Michael Barrett Matt Murton Ronnie Cedeno Pitcher Heck, I'd be skeptical of that lineup's output even with some one like Andruw Jones, Carlos Lee, or Alfonso Soriano in it. Getting two of those guys in there would help matters out quite a bit, though.