2005 Derrek Lee, .335 46 107 .418 .662 1.080 with 50 Doubles. Won a gold glove at 1B.
To put Lee's season in perspective, he had more HRs, a higher batting average, higher slugging, higher OPS, more doubles, more total bases and higher OPS+ than Miguel Cabrera did in his 2012 triple crown MVP season. Plus, he hit into just 12 double plays, compared to Cabrera's 28.
2001 Sammy Sosa .328 64 160 .437 .737 1.174. Sosa is the only player in baseball history to hit 60+ HRs in a season 3 times and this was the final season he did it. Again, compared to Cabrera's 2012 triple crown season, Sosa had
20 more HRs,
21 more RBI and hit just two points lower. Also, Sosa had higher slugging, higher OPS, more total bases and higher OPS+. This should be Sosa's best card, as he had career highs in runs, BA, BB, OBP, slugging, total bases, OPS and OPS+. Plus, he'll be bulletproof. If Sixto Lezcano's new card is $9 mil+, Sosa's card should be in the $11 mil range.
1974 Rick Monday .294 20 58 .375 .467 .842. Monday had a fine 19 year big league career with the A's, Cubs and Dodgers and this was his career high BA while he was a regular at a time when hitting .294 ,meant that you were a good hitter. The Cubs are woefully short on good lefty sticks and Monday hit .313 vs lefties that year and .285 against righties. This card should be an improvement over Monday's 1975 card, where he hit just .267. If nothing else, Monday should have his best card for saving the flag 40 years ago when two idiots tried to burn it on the field:
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=IrV8QPQAhxo1993 Rick Wilkins .303 30 73 .376 .561 .937. The post WWII & expansion Cubs are woefully short on good catching. But for one season, Rick Wilkins became one of just a handful of major league lefty hitting catchers to hit .300 and smash 30 HRs in the same season. While he was platooned most of the year, hitting just .226 against lefties, Wilkins' 1993 season still ranks as one of the best for a Cubs catcher other than those of Gabby Hartnett. It's too bad injuries limited him thereafter.
2004 Aramis Ramirez .318 36 103 .373. .578 .951. The Cubs stole Ramirez from the Pirates when the Pirates dumped him for salary purposes. For nine years thereafter, Ramirez put up consistently good numbers with the Cubs, averaging
25+ Hrs a year and a .294 BA while playing a respectable 3B.
1971 Glenn Beckert .342 2 42 .367 .406 .773. Beckert was a slick fielding good hitting 2nd baseman for the Cubs from the late '60s leading up to 1971, his best season. In the 5 seasons from 1966 to 1970, Beckert averaged nearly .290 when that average was nearly unheard of for second basemen of that era. He even won a gold glove in 1968. His best season was 1971 at age 30, and he should have had several more big seasons thereafter, but late in the season, he tore his achilles and he was never the same afterwards.
1963 Dick Ellsworth 22-10 2.11 just 14 HRs and 75 BBs surrendered in 290 innings, with 1.025 WHIP. Cubs could use a lefty starting pitcher in the post WWII set.