It's not a dig, it's showing the truth. With Yamamoto doing well with Miami, he's on here telling everyone how he proclaimed Yamamoto was the piece that terrified him at the thought of losing when the Yelich trade was made. He said nothing of the sort. In general, everyone here should rest comfortably that the trade was a slam dunk, a home run. Even if all 4 Marlins end up contributing as major leaguers, we don't need people being revisionist about the deal. The Brewers got more than they possibly could have asked for. It's actually quite astonishing given what Yelich has accomplished that people are still looking back in fear at what was given up. One thing I've learned is that basically anything short of trading Hernan Perez for a guy who makes multiple AS teams, will always bring out the people who insist it was bad. If what we give up has any kind of redeeming quality at all, there will be gymnasts somewhere willing to bend it how they want.