To me the rebuild/retool started the minute ownership/front office decided to stop signing any free agents, when it was pretty clear the core needed help to continue to be competitive. You could probably argue 2019. I definitely start it in atleast 2020. I've never believed that 2020 team makes the playoffs in a full season. I think they would have been happy to sell off in 2020 but covid messed up the plan. So i count us on year 5. And yes, selling the core when they did, a year later, was the right decision. Probably would have been better in 2020. But they could've dropped another 20 mil on some one year deals, especially bullpen, in either year, and potentially changed the outcome for the end of that group. Theo definitely deserves a lot of blame for not having a development system that could replace small parts on a team that expensive. But It's not like holding back from that spending prevented us from a rebuild, or helped us to a quicker one. No money saved rolled over. We just ignored glaring holes and put all the pressure on a group getting more expensive but mostly regressing. They stopped being willing to spend to improve and we're still waiting for the "right time" to act like a top 5 market again. Each new revenue stream eventually gets ignored as Ricketts demands "more revenue" for higher payroll. I really have no doubt that Hoyer's improved development and spending strategies will eventually lead to a team that maintains success easier on a smaller budget. As long as he develops a star or two. That is more likely to lead to sustained success. But there was always enough revenue to fill out clear roster flaws if they wanted. They just didn't feel a need to when the park was full either way. That's why Theo left. Now we wait for the next great revenue stream idea before we can hit that scary lux tax as we enter Year 5.