While we hear a lot of the great pitching beats great hitting mantra in the postseason, in the regular season it is possible to make the postseason with average pitching and an extremely potent line-up. Why is this true? There is more mediocre to bad pitching than there is great pitching. A powerful line-up will feast on that bad to mediocre pitching. Pitching becomes more important in the postseason. But even then, it's more important to have 1-2 great starters than it is to have a very good, deep rotation. While most of us are clamoring for a deep rotation, if the Cubs were able to get Arod for SS and improve CF with a Soriano additon, the offense might look like this: CF Soriano LF Murton SS Arod 1b Lee 3b Ramirez RF Jones C Barrett 2b Izturia/Theriot Even if the Cubs had to pay the price of Rich Hill for Arod, if they could sign one of the dominant pitching FA like Daisuke, Schmidt, or Zito they would be ok. Yes, 3/5 of the rotation would be up in question, but with that line-up the Cubs would score plenty. And even in the playoffs, the Cubs would have Zambrano + Schmidt/Daisuke/Zito as the two aces needed to win along with a potent line-up.