When Corey was torching ST pitching, some people chose to point out the most recent "change". The "hold on to the bat with 2 hands on the follow through" change. This can, at times, be effective.....in Little League. Bottom line, nobody in the organization has been able to isolate, or provide helpful criticism, of Corey's problems. This is the same organization that was so desperate for Sammy to move closer to the plate, even though he was hitting 60+ HR's a season standing the exact distance from the plate. It is painful for me to continue listening to these obscene "suggestions" from all of the ex-hitters. Before I get the usual response of "do you really think you know more about hitting than guys who have spent decades playing the game professionally?", allow me to respond. Yes. I am beginning to believe that I know more about hitting than the entire Cubs coaching staff combined. Hold on to the bat with 2 hands on the release?.....are you kidding me? If any of you are criticizing Corey for his release, long swing, stance, approach or discipline, please...I'm begging you....just stop. Corey's problems are even more basic than that...if you can imagine. Based on what the pitchers it the NL know of Corey Patterson, and barring any mystery muscle growth (ala Barry Bonds), Corey is not going to bounce back. Either he is not listening, or he is getting poor advice. Considering the fact that he went into the season with a different release, I would assume that we can use this as proof that he is willing to listen to suggestions, regardless of the value of those suggestions. For the record, I am not a "hindsight is 20-20" kind of guy. If any of you care to research, shortly into the beginning of the regular season, when Corey was actuallly hitting, I "predicted" he would have a terrible year. He is having a bad year only because he is receiving terrible advice from his coaching staff. Reading your post, I'm not sure I understand what your saying. But I'm definitely not criticizing any aspect of Corey's swing or coaching or anything like that. When I said "see it" I meant it figuratively, as in SEE THE RESULTS. I couldn't care less how long or short his swing is, or even care about his new "hitting philosophies". Personally, I think Corey is simply NOT a good ballplayer. A journeyman who someone will start in CF, but never a star. We've seen what he does, he bats .260, hits 25 home runs, strikes out a ton, doesn't walk, steals a lot of bases. He's better than the player he's been this year, but anyone expecting him to ever improve significantly beyond that, why? He hasn't even done it in the minors with the exception of one year in single A. Everyone points to his speed, strength, etc. Who cares? I don't consider that baseball talent. Aram is one of the slowest men on the planet and has a gut, but he has an uncanny ability to hit the ball. Pure and simple. Get the bat on the ball. Corey simply does not have baseball talent. He either lacks the eye, the coordination, or both. But he can't, and I see no reason he ever will change. I profess to know nothing about baseball hitting mechanics. I'd have no problem trading him for the right price. And I'll add something. If anyone is saying that CPatt is playing like crap because he's been mismanaged, miscoached, or mishandled, I say please stop it. It's ridiculous. Would CPatt be 2004 Beltran now if the Cubs had simply not mismanaged him? The Cubs gave him what every player wants, ample time to play. With all the criticism that Dusty does not play young players, Corey is one of the only young players in Dusty's Cub history he has ever played every single day. Even when he was playing like crap. Really, would getting the right video analysis or hitting in the correct spot in the order really have made any difference?