Cardinals: As others have said, Pujols, Carpenter, Berkman, Furcal, Jackson all have their contracts up at the end of the year. The Cards and Pujols weren't anywhere close on terms before the season and if they lose him, that team looks really, really bad. If they give in and pay him anywhere near his asking price, they're looking at around $20-something million minus arbitration raises (so more like $12-15 million I'd guess) to replace Carpenter, Berkman, Furcal and Jackson. With all those players and Pujols, they're all of 6 games over .500 this year. Brewers: The Brewers currently lead the division at 9 games over .500 (still the second worst division leading record in baseball). After this season, they are almost certain to lose Fielder. It's pretty realistic to see them hovering around .500 next year with the same team minus Prince. Pirates: The darlings of contending teams this year, everybody's talking about the Pirates, but they're only 4 games over .500. They have one regular position player with an OPS over .800 (McCutcheon) and are winning largely on Jeff Karstens and Paul Maholm pitching out of their minds. They're pretty young, so the rest of the team could get better, but that would be offset by potential (likely?) regressions from Maholm and Karstens. They'll also have to pick up the options on guys like Maholm and Doumit to keep them. Reds: The Reds are currently 4 games under .500 and have an awful rotation outside of Cueto (awesome) and Leake (average). They won 91 games last year, but haven't won more than 80 in any season since 2000 other than that and are below .500 at the trade deadline - hard to see them as perennial winners. Their offense isn't all that young, with just four regulars under 30 and one of them is Paul Janish. Votto and Bruce are really good, but it'd be hard to see this team make any kind of big jump by next season. plus they have to pick up Phillips' $12 million club option to keep him next year along with Cordero's $12 million club option - that puts their 2012 payroll at $74 million before considering arbitration raises. Their payroll is $80 million this year. Astros: They're currently 7 games behind the Cubs and just traded one of their best players. If you don't think the Cubs can make a big jump next year, there's really no way the Astros could. The Cubs will have to make a big jump, obviously, but have more resources than any other team in the division and the best players in FA match up perfectly with their needs (Fielder/Pujols and Wilson). I simply don't see strong indications that the Central is going to be anything but extremely mediocre next year. As for Randy Wells, he had a 4.26 ERA and 3.94 xFIP last year. His ERA this year is 6.16 and his xFIP is 4.37. Nearly every peripheral is worse this year from last year and significantly so in some cases. The 2010 Wells was much closer to the 2009 Wells and that kind of production is perfectly fine as the 5th best starter on the team.