I was hoping Doran, Gilliam and Fernandez as B bunters set to bunt more, would like, bunt more. Twice in 2 games, with no outs and a runner on first, Doran and Gilliam hit away into outs. That is prime sac bunt time?
Crawrford and Ichiro are A bunters, Crawford has no checks and Ichiro set to not bunt.
So the only great bunters you have.... One is set to not bunt and the other has no settings? Given that I think you are getting about as many bunts as you can expect.
Real world example. Ron Washington loved to bunt. Elvis was a good bunter. It felt like evey time leadoff hitter got on ahead of Elvis the bunt was going to be on. But still as a team Rangers only got in to the 40s. And that was the last couple years when they had allowed most sluggers to walk away. And this year really had no true sluggers. Beltre was a great hitter having a great season but his HRs were down with nobody protecting him.
I would expect Hal to be programmed to approximate actions of a real life manager. And real managers, even the most aggressive with bunting strategy hang around the 80s for a season. Going back to the 1980s when it was more common strategy slightly over 100 would usually mean you led all of baseball. I just do not think you can realistically expect Hal to bunt more just below every other game unless you really make a commitment.
If B rated bunters set to bunt more on the individual settings and aggressive bunting
Bottom line it is not giving you results you were hoping for. That says to me if this is to be your strategy gotta go with A bunters. In the old literature C was described as average, B as above average, and A as excellent. If I am a manager I only bunt aggressively with the excellent bunter. The B bunts late in the game when circumstances indicate a single run can make the difference between winning and losing.