I already addressed Byrd and Jackson. Soriano cleared the NL and MLB average for RF OPS last season, and he did it with a .266 BABIP. ONE clearing the ops average for your position by 11 points while sporting an obp 40 points below average does not make you an average offensive left fielder. TWO the numbers for the position as a whole are just that: for the position as a whole. if you are a starter and hit what the position as a whole hit, you are below average, as those numbers incorporate all sorts of other crap guys who got at bats there but weren't good enough to be starters. the cubs are going to have those guys too, and they are going to bring our numbers for the positions as a whole down as well. You are severely both effects, imo. Unless you aren't considering average to be a range and that a player who is a fractional run below the strict league average is a "below-average" player. Remember, we're taking this in the context of a conversation that says that with Ramirez or an elite 1bman, the Cubs offense will be soooo bad that they'll lose 90 games even without an elite pitching staff.