 now I guess we've seen over the years the evolution of the shift guys with the cards where am I playing what's the positioning I'm moving from third over to second that's not going to happen what's going to happen is two guys on each side of second base got to have the feet on the dirt when the pitchers on the mound how do you think drastically that's going to change I think it's going to help a lot of lefty power hitters I mean we've seen like Mark to share used to be a 300 hitter and then the shift came into play and he dropped about 50 points he was not the same average hitter as he used to be he tried to hit the ball over the shift we saw that with Joey Gallo we've seen Anthony Rizzo lose a lot of points on his batting average as well he's not a 220 hitter he never was but this takes it away here's my one worry though Bob I think that teams are going to figure this out and we saw a lot of it toward the end of the year they're going to play with two outfielders and they're going to put a third outfielder in short right field so it's going to have the same effect maybe the legislative against that during the season another thing I don't like there was talk about maybe having like a pie slice around second base because if I think the most hits get taken away by the infielder that's up the middle yes absolutely I mean just watching it on TV you're watching him on TV a hard ground ball at the middle is a single all the time when we grew up now all of a sudden the camera pulls out and there's an infielder there there's still going to be an infielder there he might be an inch over toward the the side that he's supposed to be on but you're not going to stop the shift in that way so I hope that it evolves and they make it a pie chart so that up the middle is open it does feel like it's going to be changing over the course of the next