Firstly, you're confusing baroque intensity for befuddled amusement!
Secondly, if what you and Valen are suggesting is that real life G/F ratios do not correlate well with Strat-O G/F ratios, I can kind of half go along with that. The implication is, a card has to be filled out, so SOM just assigns a pct of fly balls, a pct of ground balls etc etc according to expected MLB averages across the board. However, I do believe ground ball pitchers have more ground ball results on their respective cards. If they didn't, you should see things like regression to the mean when it comes to the stats. But this is not the case. Known ground ball pitchers like Masterson, Cobb and Burnett virtually always have two GB outcomes for every FB outcome at the end of any given SOM Online season. Guys like Travis Wood and Tillman virtually always give up more FB than GB.
So far, this is what we have:
G/F is irrelevant because the x chances are all the same.
G/F is irrelevant because the stats are fixed.
G/F is irrelevant because there is no wind in Strat-O.
More Princess Bride:
Buttercup: We'll never survive!
Westley: Nonsense. You're only saying that because no one ever has.
So I'm going to need a little more.
Let's try: The experiment will not work because (fill in the blank).
If G/F is not predictive, then by definition I should not be able to predict who the G/F guys to have are. But I can.
Thirdly, bbfan, The Princess Bride is one of the great quotable movies of all time. Unless of course you did not get the memo on the changes to the TPS cover sheets!
* Note: all of the above is intended humor and NOT baroque intensity, except the part about there being no wind in Strat-O.