Just got my edition of "The Book: playing the percentages in baseball".
http://www.amazon.com/gp/product/B000EW872M/qid=1142267634/sr=1-1/ref=sr_1_1/104-2078050-9365556?s=books&v=glance&n=283155
This is a great tool for every diehard Strato fan---and for baseball fans as well. Over a hundred tables showing real-life and theoretical calculations about how to win the game.
I'll put in here some of the thoughts found in the book, but there is so much tables that I think it's worth having the book.
Perhaps the most controversial claim so far: in low-run scoring environment---say facing a good pitching in the national league---bunting early in the game appears after all as a good strategy.
(the bones of the argument leading to this conclusion is that 1- on average, 11% of all bunt attempts result in singles, and that 2- sometimes, after a bunt attempt that results in a foul ball, you can still let the hitter loose. On face value, these arguments seem to apply to Strat as well: very good bunters (bunt A) have 11% of chances of having a single out of a bunt attempt, and in Strat, like in real baseball, some bunt attempts result in the famous 1&2 and retry, where you can still decide to go with a bunt or let the hitter loose).