Rizzo also signed veteran righty Dan Haren to a one-year deal to round out the rotation, a signing which has the potential to be a steal, but is a bit of a risk given Haren's back and hip issues over the last year. Gone are Burnett, Gonzalez and Gorzelanny, replaced by Zach Duke and possibly Bill Bray. While the Nats' offseason moves have gotten praise around the league from opposing teams' front office members and various national media types, there seem to be a contingent of Nationals fans that wish that Rizzo hadn't done so much tinkering with the roster. This is, after all, a group that finished the 2012 regular season with the best record in baseball and won the National League East for the first time in team history. It's also a group which lost Werth, Morse, Wilson Ramos and Drew Storen for long stretches due to injuries last season. That contingent of fans (however large it may be) might argue that if the Nats perform to the level they did last year, stay a bit healthier and have a full season of Stephen Strasburg, there's no reason to believe this group won't make an even deeper push into the postseason in 2013. Look about 45 minutes up I-95, however, and you'll find a group of Orioles fans who have the exact opposite take on their team's offseason approach. The Orioles have not made many changes to their roster to this point in the offseason, and it looks likely that they'll go into spring training banking on last year's playoff team having similar success with the same pieces in place this season. It's two different mindsets: One mindset is that a team should never rest on its laurels; it should always be looking for ways to improve its roster from one season to the next. The other mindset is that you shouldn't mess with a good thing, and if a team had success with a certain group one season, that group should be given another shot, if possible, the next. There's not necessarily a right or a wrong approach for a general manager to take. All Rizzo can do is follow his gut and do what he feels is in the best interest of the ballclub. He clearly feels the team is better with Span in center and atop the batting order, Adam LaRoche at first base, Werth and Harper down in the order and Haren toward the back of the rotation, even if that means Morse and Jackson aren't back in 2013. Do you share that mindset? Do you like Rizzo taking a chance and making moves to tweak the roster of last year's NL East champions, or would you have prefer he let things remain the same in 2013?