1. Cardinals are not infallible Had we signed Bigbie and Encarnacion this board would have melted down. Now that the Cards have signed Encarnacion more than one poster on this board has suggested that will make him great. Is that rational? BP's metrics had the Cards about 5.5 games better than the Cubs last year. They have lost some key memebers, added some question marks and a full year of Scott Rolen. We can't compete with that? 2. Cubs a cinch to be better At last year's stats Pierre would be about 20 runs better than Patterson. Last year we had 21 games started by pitchers who were not among our top 6 starters. Those 21 starts had a 6.45 in 113 IPs. While most teams cannot find average starters, we can. If those 113 IPs would be filled with the four guys we have who pitched at the league average last year, Rusch, Williams, Wood and Miller, we'd save another 25 runs. Even if Lee regresses to his 2003 or first five months of 2004 self, this team would still project to about 85 or 86 wins. That assumes Cedeno hits like Perez. That Murton hits like our collective leftfielder of 2005 (@.260, .318, .418). That our bullpen pitches like last year's version. I suspect the surprises will be to the upside. That leads into my final point... 3. Cubs may have already hit bottom Last year was a train wreck and we still won 79 games. In this decade 7 teams have won divisions having won 79 games or fewer the year before (I am counting the 2000 Mariners who were not given a chance to tie for the division because of the Wild Card rules). Including divisional ties, thats 18% of divisional winners (7/39) making that climb. It happens all the time because variable performances are the rule. Last night I saw a panel of three Chicago media guys pick the Cubs for 72, 75 and 78 wins. They don't do any analysis, they just reflect the zeitgeist. "Cubs won 79 games, the headlines are bad, the Sox are World Champs, let's subtract from 79." But they are starting from the low base that was the 2005 season. Like in the stock market, all the bad news is reflected in last year's record. While a 1991 Mets-style collapse is possible it is highly unlikely. The Cubs are much more likely to flirt with 90 wins. And if they get positive surprises like Wood or Prior pitching in April, Pierre hitting over .300, or Murton hitting like he did last year, we could have the 2004 Cardinals on our hands. BTW, the consensus on this board in the Spring of '04 was that the Cardinals were in serious decline. Full circle baby.