You are obviously weren't paying attention to the nuances when you were "following it." Like most casual baseball watchers, you just wanted to see balls in play and some running around.
Wrong again. Soriano was thrown curve balls only 13% of the time, and he murdered them if they found the strikezone:
https://www.fangraphs.com/zonegrid.a...on=all&data=pi
See all that red? That means good. Mike Trout's for comparison:
https://www.fangraphs.com/zonegrid.a...on=all&data=pi
I don't get the point mentioning Bonds, Sosa, Soriano? Are you trying to suggest that since you saw glaringly obvious moves like walking the most feared hitter of all time or watching bad hitters chase, you somehow "get" baseball? That's like someone who casually watched basketball saying, "I remember when they hacked Shaq since they couldn't stop him otherwise and I remember all the bad shots Iverson used to take. I know basketball, bro."
It's not overthought at all. And knuckleball pitchers are predictably inconsistent (why mention them anyway? Are you trying to say since they kind of wing it, it means you don't need to pitch tactically to succeed if you have an unhittable pitch? That goes for all sports. If you have some unstoppable move, tactics are no longer needed. But the knuckler isn't unstoppable and it's risky). It's why they're a rare breed and used only as a "different look" much like a zone defense gets killed long term but is effective in giving a defensive a different look. And yes,
you have to pitch certain ways to certain batters but it's a lot more complicated than just looking at a heat map and scripting a plan from there. Again,
do you want to take the baseball analysis challenge or not? If you're the "open minded sports nut" you say you are, you should welcome extra insight on the sport.
:lmao bolded. You really are clueless. It's funny.
I don't hate mathematical approaches in the NBA. I hate that the 3 pointer is mathematically unbalanced. Not the same thing. A mathematical approach would be, "His career shot chart tells us he shoots the worse on midrange jumpers from the left side, so let's try to force him there." Chucking 3s exploits a mathematical flaw.
You serious? Morey signed Shane Battier based solely on his metrics, and the Rockets M.O. before anyone else caught up was to apply Moneyball and analytics to the signing of players over biased "eye test" evaluations.
And analytics have much more predictive power in basketball than in baseball, despite the latter having a much more sophisticated approach. I told you time and time again how first round draft picks in baseball have a much higher washout rate than in any other sport.
You can't simply look at a prospect's high school, foreign league, or college stats and then neatly project MLB performance. The most hyped MLB prospect since Harper, the first overall pick in last year's draft with a 102mph fastball at 18 years old, currently has a 10.00 era in freaking rookie ball. Meanwhile, NBA draft picks are ready to contribute in some form immediately. No minor league development needed.
Stats are just a starting point for evaluation in baseball, just like any other sport. And again, pretty much every sport is taking an analytical approach since raw eye tests can be misleading. It's why everyone hyped Kirbs for years as some basketball Jesus while more in depth stats told a different story.
Maybe you were a casual fan once, but you really do have only a shallow understanding of the sport at best. And :lol at needing a "superstar face" in a sport to drive interest. That's another problem with the NBA.