I see no problem with using the past to evaluate possible futures. Every member of this ballclub was picked by the same people as those who picked previous ballclubs. Every executive of front-office member was picked by previous ones, as well. Each edition of the Cubs team is not an independent simulation of a baseball team. It is a continuation of an organization that has shown time and again it is capable of failure from almost any situation. Just because someone was "picked" to play for the cubs, that does not make them a choke artist. They are different players, playing in a different time, against different opposition. I expect, given those factors, that results may vary just a tad from previous years, no? I'm not sure what to make of the executive point, other than they obviously pick players that fold? How about a more concrete example, then: The same GM that did not smack Dusty Baker in the head and say "Hey, stop being an idiot with Mark Prior's arm. Every inning you waste him with now is an inning we might wish his arm still had in it later." Is the same GM that did not smack Lou Piniella in the head and say "Hey, stop being an idiot with Carlos Marmol's arm. Every inning you waste him with now is an inning we might wish his arm had later." Andy MacPhail is the guy who refused to accept age-based concerns about Sosa in the summer he was almost traded, which would have been much better for the team, and instead kept him at an age for too long. Andy MacPhail is the guy who hired Jim Hendry, presumably because he liked and agreed with his views on building a baseball team. Jim Hendry is the guy who thought Alfonso Soriano would be a great investment at his age (and with middle-infield miles on his legs, which is never a good thing long-term) and wasn't concerned that both of our other star hitters are also entering the age where skill drops are quite possible. Alfonso Soriano's legs and the possibly skill drops of our two best hitters have been a drag on the team to this point in teh season. See how little bad decisions build on themselves and become detriments to winning?