.792 career OPS as a left handed batter is terrible? It's not exactly all world, but is it terrible? Especially considering the last four years before signing as a Cub he had OPS of .940, .937, .793, and .856 as a lefty? Really? And a career OPS of .820 is mediocre? Really? Even whille hitting in non-band box type stadiums at home like in 2007 when he OPSed 1.000 as a Padre? I'm sorry, but all these people like you with I-told-ya-so's about Bradley have no ground to stand on because the chief complaint was that he would be injured. At this pont he's played in 5 less games than our iron man Derek Lee. Nobody was predicting that he wouldn't perform when he played. It all comes down to the fact that he's having a terrible year at the plate. Nothing more, nothing less. Slumps happen in baseball. Just look at our beloved Jim Edmonds who OPSed a whopping .728 in the '07 season and .458 to start the '08 season before miraculously turning it around with the Cubs and hitting for a .937 OPS. Ugh. First of all, you know exactly what I meant. No, a .792 OPS by itself isn't "terrible', but in the context of the situation, it is. The main goal of Hendry's offseason was to get a big left handed bat. When you trade key players just to make that happen and you're taling about a corner outfielder who is supposed to be a sluggr from that side, yes, a .792 OPS is terrible. Maybe if Bradley was a middle infielder that would be nice production. And for a corner outfielder, how can you say an .820 OPS is anything but mediocre? I mean, seriously. Among qualified RF in the NL this season, an .820 OPS would be exactly in the middle of the pack. It would be 8th of 16. In the AL it would be 8th of 15. It literally is the very definition of mediocre. And no, nobody thought he would be this bad, but he didn't have to be this bad for it to be a bad signing and for people wanting his head. If he was putting up an .820 OPS right now, we'd be saying the same things. I questioned how good he would be before the season (although I thought he'd be a high .800's OPS guy) and I remember other people questioning as well, so don't say that nobody did. It was stupid to think it was a foregone conclusion that he'd rake. And for people saying his career numbers aren't relevant. Guess what? He's now performed at them or below them in 4 of the last 6 season. Umm, that's pretty relevant. Not to mention the fact that one of the 2 good "seasons" that break up the 4 career average ones was a total of 144 ABs in San Diego, and the other was played in Arlington.