Tue Dec 09, 2014 12:43 pm
We keep going round and round here, but just to clarify, from my perspective, I care zero about the imagination of the action. I'm not imagining fly balls turning into homers from the swirling winds. And I also recognize a printed word on a card is just a word. However, those words have statistical meaning in our game. Runners move around the bases and score based on the statistical realities of the dice rolls.
You say all X chances are the same. I agree. If I had an imaginary Strat hitter card and rolled an x chance on the pitchers card, and the result was a single thru the shortstop, that does not qualify me as a ground ball hitter any more than it makes Mike Trout a ground ball hitter. But Trout's card is full of hits and ways to move runners that a lesser card is not. Now, I am making an assumption that extra base hits are scored by the Strat models as fly balls (at the very least, more often than not). Therefore, doubles, triples and home runs, which appear to be ruled as fly balls, are obviously of more value. So if balls hit in the air (even imaginary air) create 7.5 times the offense of balls hit on the ground (singles and assorted ground outs), it would be more productive to seek out the fly ball hitters.
I'm not intentionally trying to be thick here, but there's a disconnect that I just can't figure out. It seems like you're saying every card yields the exact same results, but I know that can 't be right. You can visually see that Pierre has a LOT of ground outs on his card. This is confirmed by the Sim Misc tab for G/F. You can also see Ibanez will usually have more FB than GB. I think most of us would agree that Ibanez' card will yield more overall production than Pierre's card, demonstrating that FB are more productive.
The only thing I can figure is that you're saying that doubles and triples, like singles, are ruled 50% GB, 50% FB. Maybe that's the case. But even then, no ground balls are home runs. So although this isn't any kind of revelation, home run hitters have more value than non-home run hitters (generally speaking). And home run hitters don't usually also ground out a lot.
We seem to agree that SLG = production. If I use G/F as a synonym for SLG, I just don't see what I'm doing wrong.