I don't follow the Cubs as closely as many of you but here's my 2013 plan. I'll start with my projected opening day lineup: CF DeJesus RF Sappelt 1B Rizzo LF Soriano SS Castro 3B Stewart C Castillo 2B Barney I'll begin in the outfield. Soriano is too productive to give away and isn't blocking any young talent so he stays, for now. DeJesus has wicked L/R splits, can play all three outfield spots and is in the final year of a reasonable contract. Jackson starts in AAA and DeJesus is moved at the deadline to a contender who needs more offense against right handed pitching, almost the easiest trade to make. Sappelt has been impressive enough that I want to keep a corner outfield spot open. I would look to free agency to fill the backup spots. I know some will hate this idea but I like Reed Johnson. I would platoon him with DeJesus in center and have all three outfield positions backed up with one guy. This allows me to keep Campana in AAA and I have three able center fielders so Jackson can work on his mechanics. For the fifth outfielder, any guy with some power works and the ability right is a bonus. The infield is almost brain dead simple. I believe that it's possible that the broken bone in Stewart's hand might explain why his offensive production fell off and the Cubs owe it to themselves to give Stewart the opportunity. If it works, the Cubs are out of AAAA and back into the major leagues. Castro. I would like to see competition at second but if that lineup (Sappelt and Stewart) is productive then Barney is good enough for now. Rizzo. Castillo looks good but having Clevenger around can't hurt. As for the bench, with Clevenger around you've covered the plate and corners. Barney can play short so a player who can play second or second and third is all that is essential. My eleven position plays are: Soriano, DeJesus, Sappelt, Johnson, Stewart, Castro, Barney, Rizzo, Castillo, Clevenger and a second baseman who can play third. I really don't care who the last two players are, aside from an outfield bat and not wasting money or giving out multi-year contracts. The pitching staff is impossible to predict as this is where the Cubs should spend some cash. I can live with Samardzija, Garza and Wood but there isn't anything out of the rest that I would expect to be major league ready before the middle of next season. If the Cubs are intent on moving Garza before the deadline, they should have a player ready in AAA. I would sign two starting pitchers. The first would get a three or four year contract. He's only a middle of the rotation guy but young enough that it's not unreasonable to expect we've locked him up for his peak seasons. The other guy can be anything short term. As for the bullpen, who knows. Moving on to 2014 and a team with a legitimate chance to contend day one. Soriano may or may not be with the team at the end of the 2013 season but I can't see why we'd trade a guy who is productive, not a malcontent, isn't going to bring a lot in return, isn't blocking anyone and gets easier to trade with each passing day. I can't believe I'm saying it but it wouldn't bother me if he played out his contract. That said, if Sappelt rips it up and we can get a youngish stud corner outfielder, then I trade without hesitation no matter the cost or the return. Also, if my plan fails but Soriano is productive, he's a nice trade chip before the 2014 deadline. Center is a different matter. My plan insures Jackson gets time to work before he's called up but if he can't be productive then we'll need to sign a guy for a season or two. I'm comfortable with Sappelt manning one of the corner spots. I will concede small sample size, weak competition and no scouting reports. I'm going with my gut and keeping a corner outfield spot open for him to seize next spring. The infield is in decent shape. I feel comfortable with Castro and Rizzo as two quality pieces to a contending puzzle. I can live with a cheap Barney if we get production elsewhere. I like what I've seen from Castillo. The hot corner is key. If the broken bone was the issue and Stewart is back to the player he was prior to the injury it's huge. I'm not suggesting he's great or that he would settle in at third long term, only that he would be an asset. Now, setting aside center for the moment, if everything else lives up to my expectations I am still looking at corner outfield, third and second as positions where I can improve my team in 2014 and beyond. Pitching is another matter. I'm assuming Samardzija is good enough to be the second or third best starting pitcher on a contender, in 2014. The John Doe character is a three or four. Wood and whoever fills Garza's role are fours or fives. I also assume there will be a couple of guys as good those two in spring training. That means, at worst, I have the middle and back of the rotation set with major league ready pitching in AAA. For the 2014 season I do what ever it takes, if it's a pile or cash or a pile of prospects it doesn't matter, I get a top of the rotation pitcher. And I would not shy away from adding a top quality older pitcher on an expensive but much shorter deal as well. I know some believe I lack the vision or creativity to build a contender for next year. I believe I am being prudent. I want to see Sappelt, Castillo, Stewart and Jackson and if necessary show me Vitters and Clevenger too. I want to see Samardzija, Wood, and the pitcher we are able to sign to a multi-year deal. Show me a couple farm kids able to pitch effectively in the majors. If I see enough to justify committing big money long term in 2014 to a legitimate and proven top of the rotation guy, even if it costs top prospects, I do it. If all these guys who are unproven (or unknown) do not justify my faith then trading top prospects now is suicidal and committing massive cash long term to a top shelf player who makes almost no difference in the standings despite a Cy Young type performance is a massive waste of cash. Garza and the Cubs contending in June are the wildcards.