If memory serves me, if your batter hits better than .250 dont hit and run
Where does that memory come from? I agree there is some point at which using H&R no longer makes sense. That is true of real life and not just Strat. i doubt if Hamilton, Kemp or Votto get the H&R sign. Doubt Ruth or Cobb were asked to do it a lot. And think it would be more complicated than just BA of whatever. In real life you would factor in not only how good the hitter was otherwise but also how DP prone he was and how well he made contact. Doubt Rob Deer got the H&R called many times when he was up there. Trumbo is hitting .320 but doubt with all those strikeouts he is asked to give it a try.
Still, when someone tosses out a hard number my mind always immediately asks why would that be the cutoff? What is magical about that number? Suspect someone looked at the H&R charts and calculated a BA that would result from it. But that simple calculation would not be factoring in the number of times the chart calls up a gb(C) to advance the runner when a gb(A) might have otherwise been the result.
H&R is an integral part of small ball. Might be fun to add to the discussion how much of a role it should play in small ball. When we all talk about small ball are we just talking about high BA, high OBP hitters? Do we just mean an absence of HR hitters in the lineup? Or is setting H&R and bunt to aggressive also a prominent part of it? Is basestealing a necessary part?
And perhaps might be interesting to discuss difference in how small ball is/should implemented by us in Strat verses how it is implemented in real life?