I was basically phrasing my response to two general things which have been coming up recently: 1) The complete outpouring of people claiming that the Yankees had no fire, hustle, or desire to go out there and win. These people claim that this is the primary reason why the Yankees lost to the Tigers, rather than because the Tigers' rotation and bullpen was worlds better than the Yankees' or something equally reasonable. 2) The number of people who have been saying that Jim Hendry shouldn't bother re-signing Aramis Ramirez if he opts out due to Ramirez's character (inability to step up while Lee was down, his nagging injuries, his lack of hustle, etc). Somehow, these people have blinded themselves to the fact that Ramirez has been one of the most productive guys on this team during his time here. Heck, I'm sure plenty of people on this board would take Ramirez over Derrek Lee. In my years of watching baseball, I've seen guys who seem to have tremendous heart, character, and emotion go out there and stink up the joint. I've also seen seemingly lazy, disinterested, despicable, and unemotional players have Hall of Fame careers. Maybe those guys were not getting the most out of their talent; I can't say for sure. The fact of the matter is, those guys are among the all-time greats. Even if they only put 75% of their effort into everything, they still managed to outproduce the scrappy hustlers by incredible amounts. While there are certain situations in which hustle can be the deal-breaker, I think those situations are, on the whole, limited. From what I have seen in MLB, it's rare that you will have two players with comparable tools and production, but differing levels of effort. Most of the time, there's enough of a disparity in talent/production to merit playing one over the other. I don't think hustle is something that should be the primary thing a GM or a manager should look for in a baseball player. I don't think hustle is something that trumps production. This doesn't just apply to All Star and HOF-caliber players; it applies to every level of a team. I just don't think a number of people get that. I'm not big into emotion during a baseball game. It's fine as long as you can still maintain focus but if you can't, it hurts your game. I also think it's funny that you continue to make scappy hustlers a 240 hitting type guy that puts up terrible numbers. Rose is a good example of a guy that made the most of his talent and put up good numbers so not all scappy players are below average talent wise. I think GM's look for hustle or players that either know the game or put work into their craft because they don't want a guy that can just hit a little better than average and once that hitting ability goes he has nothing else to offer to the team. When your in a slump what do you offer the team while your in that 3-30? You see, not that's it's entierly right but when Ramirez didn't hit that well when Lee was first out that's what people notice, his hitting. He doesn't bring a lot to the table other than that even though he seemed to still be able to continue fielding well which is a good thing. He's paid to hit and he usually does it quite well but that little slump is what was noticed by many. Is it right? Well, I'd like my 2nd best hitter in the lineup to step up when I lose my best hitter along with the other 7 guys until Lee comes back. Some players like Perez are not capable because of talent unless they go into a freakish hitting streak and if he did, wrong or right most fans would remember that, just like guys that hit or slump in the playoffs. UK gave his definition of what he looks for and I'm sure GM's are on or a little left or right of that spectrum. My point is when you have a guy that knows the game and hustles, as a coach I love it. If he sucks he doesn't play or very little but I love what he brings to the game and you have to understand what some of these guys bring to the table when it comes to the mental stability of the team. Again don't get me wrong, I want talent but some kids/players add something to every team they are on. This is such a mental game and IMO some of these type players break can break a negative train of thought or the routine of a slump and help those superstars we all love to help on the team. These hustlers or what I prefer to call them, baseball players, are not a gamble to have on the team. You know what you have and what results you're going to get. If the criteria is a 240 hitter than he doesn't play that much and is called on in certain situations, but that's how I'd play him unless he is the most talented player for that position. Talented headcases are draining on a coach/manager. You want them to reach their full potential but they don't in most cases because of their work habits. You get a guy, let's say Manny Ramirez, and he's an incredible hitter but very high maintenance at least that we've heard as I don't like to assume since I've never worked with the man. Let's just go with what we've heard just for an example. He hits the heck out of the ball and goes 2-4 with a HR and 2 RBI's but misses a cutoff and lets a flyball drop in front of him and both lead to runs to lose the game 4-3. He's at zero in a plus/minus hockey kind of way. Now, add a little attitude and complaining about his contract. He's productive at the plate no doubt but if these type of things continue has he really helped? You look in the paper and say wow...he went 2-4, that loss wasn't his fault.