There's also speculation of playing hurt (219/.266/.371 since the break). Its a down year for him, no doubt. His first and second half splits are almost identical the last two years. Was he hurt last year? He has two bad months to blame for his second half woes this year. He OPS'd in the .500+ in July and September. And he OPS'd over .800 in every other month except .767 in August. He might be a streaky player. They might have seen better pitching or had a tougher schedule those months. It might be AT&T bringing his numbers down. He hasn't been the same since he went to SF. I don't know. He did miss time in July, and has now tweaked his back again this past Saturday. He's still outplayed Milton Bradley to date in 2009, and that's the issue. He's nearly the same this year as he was last year, though. He had a .749 OPS last year and he has a .744 OPS this year. If this is a down year, then he's had two in a row. I'm thinking a mid-.700s is Aaron Rowand. As for the counting stats being superior to rate stats, think about this: Last year, Rowand had 611 PAs. In those appearances, he hit 13 HRs, 70 RBI, 37 2Bs and 0 3Bs. This year, in roughly the same number of plate appearances as Rowand had last year, Bradley and Reed have combined for 16 HRs, 60 RBI, 26 2Bs and 2 3Bs. And this was a significant down year for Bradley. Combine those counting stats with the huge advantage Bradley has over Rowand in rate stats (significantly better OBP primarily) and you have much better production in right field than Rowand. If you put Fox in place of Reed, the advantage gets even bigger. Counting stats just aren't a good way to evaluate a player.