How can we not be closer when you throw out Steve "Bye-Bye" Balboni?!?
Yes, I agree with you 99.9%.
As in my last post, I never meant to suggest that a card full of Fly Out (B) equated to a card full of doubles and homers. Think of it this way. I want a card full of homers. But if I can't have all homers, I want all homers and a triple. If I can't have all homers and a triple, I want all homers, a triple and a double. I am seeking out that card that comes closest to the most unrealistic ideal.
Now, let's say that the card I end up with is all fly outs with a home run roll on 7. What kind of card full of singles and ground outs equates to that? Statistically, there is some RC-27 measure that will eventually tend toward the singles card. I get that. And to throw in walks makes everything even harder to evaluate!
But for the purposes of the discussion here, yes, I want all Hank Aarons and I want them for a buck! Where do I find them most easily? Certainly NOT in the ground ball hitter pile. So here's our 1/10 of a percent disagreement. I have nine Hank Aarons who produce two fly balls for every ground ball. That guy will be found in the Sim Misc tab when I go searching for hitters. But you say "No fair! You need a few Jack Graney's on your team, you'll find him in the G/F ratio as well!" No I don't, I can sort out the best fly ball producers in order of production, just like the guy building the 400 home run team can skip Adam Dunn, even though he hits as many homers as Brandon Moss (or whomever).
Does that mean that this home run themed team does not adequately represent home run hitters? Would you not accept that that team proves the conclusion of searching out home run hitters? Of course not.
So if in the end, if I need to modify my experiment from Winning By Exploiting the G/F Ratio to Winning By Exploiting the G/F Ratio With the Most Productive Hitters I Can Afford Who Have a GB to FB Ratio Less Than or Equal to One, I can agree to make that modification!
Group hug - we did it!