Ash, we've been in agreement on the Cruz signing. But it's still a topsy-turvy world, and maybe the (logic) of two people don't amount to a hill of beans. But this is our hill. And these are our beans! It's small sample size with just 60 games, but here's what I found in a look-thru of the league's OPS at DH. (In case you didn't catch it, you can hover over a team and see the OPS and the number of PAs by each person who played the position.) Minn (Cruz, .997), KC (Soler, .809), Cle (Reyes, .800), Det (Miggy, .743), Bos (J.D. Martinez, .709), LAA (Ohtani .657), and Chicago (Encarnacion, .631) all had one person who got at least half the team's PAs. Without knowing how injuries played out for teams, it appears that those were the teams that used the "primary DH" approach. It's just that Cruz was so much better than them. Three of the others were above the league average and three were worse. Whether by design or the result of injuries, the other eight teams were using the "rotate guys through the spot" approach. The issue is that to do that, you have to have enough good hitters to make it work. No team did, apparently. The most regular DH for NYY (Stanton), Balt (Nunez) and Tor (Vlad) all were at least .867, but none had more than 94 PAs, so that left about 150-160 PAs to be spread out over other guys. Each of those teams scattered those PAs over at least nine guys. When you do that, you're almost certainly going to have some guys that were lousy, and they each did. (FWIW, the Twins had seven guys besides Cruz who got DH PAs, but they only totaled 38 PAs. Three had just one and two more had four apiece.) The five remaining teams not only spread out their PAs out, they did it among lousy hitters. The OPS of the most common DH for those teams was .717, .704, .654, .485 and .455. You noted that on average the Twins more than a .200 advantage at that spot. Also worth is noting is that even if Cruz drops .100, the Twins would still have had the best DHs in the league by .033 over the second-best team and at least .081 over every other team. So to your original point, if you can spend $13M and have a reasonable likelihood of creating that kind of significant advantage at any spot in the batting order, do it.