You don't become a professional athlete without a competitive ego. No, I wouldn't be happy about "job security" and a "huge raise" that came along with a demotion. I also wouldn't want to spend 8 months with a guy who was told to do just that. You play to compete and win, the money is a secondary issue. Right, money is secondary. If Dempster would turn into a problem child if the Cubs acquired a far better reliever and gave that guy the closer's role, then Dempster is a bigger clubhouse cancer than any of the victim's of the great chemistry experiment of 2004. We just differ on how we'd deal with the people involved, not necessarily on how we'd build the team. I'm all for signing the best guy available for any given position, but if Dempster was signed as the closer, and that was part of the negotiations, once he's signed I'm no longer looking for a closer. It looks like Hendry is following this "checklist" type of offseason, and looking to fill other perceived holes. Whether or not Dempster was the best option is another debate for an earlier time. Also, I'm not saying some guys don't eventually get to the point of playing for paychecks, but that's not what got them to the major leagues. The best guys want to win, be it in golf, ping pong, or celebrity bowling tournaments.:wink: