I know you aren't defending the Eduardo Nunez experience, but the real surprise is that he is not disliked more on this forum. Or, better for the Twins, disliked more by the front office. I hope he has a great season but he should not be on a major league team. He is not a "glove man" at any position and his career OPS is .684 with an OPS+ of 86 so he is not a "bat man" either. Last season he had a .271 OBP which is not surprising given that his walk rate was the lowest in the American League. Our good friend Delmon "I'm Swinging" Young had a walk rate 70% better than Nunez' and (lest you think Delmon has turned over a new leaf) Delmon had the 13th worst walk rate. Not good. Yesterday's Grantland piece taught us that the combination of Eduardo's swing mechanics and pitch selection has made him a EXCEPTIONAL outlier in the very damaging art of popping up. Like a "Go deep .... no keep going .... keep going, I'll tell you when to stop" outlier. Start with the fact that the slash-line for infield fly balls (less than 160 feet from home) in MLB last year was .021/.021/.026. Bottom-line, pop-ups are caught. Then consider the fact that the average batter hits 27 infield flyballs for every 100 regular flyballs (infield and regular flyballs being separate, non-overlapping categories). Our guy Eduardo hits 70 infield flyballs for every 100 regular flyballs. This is bad. Eduardo hits flyballs (of any kind) 34% of the time which is league-average BUT more than twice as many of those flyballs are infield flyballs than league average. And since the expected outcome of an infield flyball is .021/.021/.026, you can see the problem. Just for perspective, the next worst pop-up artist hits 53 infield flyballs for every 100 regular flyballs. In other words, in this regard, Eduardo is 33% worse than the next worst who himself is 98% worse than league average. It's amazing he produces what he does (which should earn him no roster points).