So you would rather have a hitter K with a man on third than hit a deep fly ball to the OF with 1 out? I understand what you're saying but an out isn't an out straight across the line. Yes, Cuse, that's exactly what I said. By writing that I believe in the out is an out theory, I was really saying that with a man on 3rd and less than 2 outs I would prefer a strikeout to a deep fly ball to the OF. What were you saying then? I think that's obvious. What I'd like to know is why you purposefully and obnoxiously added an obviously baseless "so you would rather" assumption into your response when nowhere in my post did I come anywhere close to even suggesting I would prefer a k to a deep fly in that situation. I didn't mean for it to sound so challenging, I just was asking for clarification of what you meant. No you weren't. You specifically took my "out is an out" statement, that did not include any reference to a prefered form of out, and then purposefully inserted a preference that you obviously knew would be illogical. For the record, I would prefer the deep fly. But my focus is going to be almost exclusively on the production at the plate numbers. If there is match of players, discounting things like age, salary, and other variables, I would prefer the one that strikes out less, unless that reduction in strikeouts is met with a net detrimental increase in double plays. I do believe that specifically playing for the sac fly is usually rather stupid. If a guy is on 2nd, and you use an out to get him to 3rd, you are basically leaving the value of that decision up to the next hitter alone, as opposed to all 3 guys, because he's the only one with a chance to have another productive out. The next guy is going to have to get a hit anyway. And you are basically taking the bat out of two players hands, because you are forcing one to ground out to the right side and forcing the next guy to hit a deep fly, as opposed to letting them use their normal comfortable swings. And they will be doing this all while the opposing pitcher is probably going to be doing whatever he can to prevent a deep fly. And even if that player does find a pitch he can hit into the air, you are narrowing his chances for success even further because while in a normal at bat, he has the option of hitting to left, center, right, on the ground, line drive or in the air, on any given pitch, in a "hit a deep fly to the OF" situation he doesn't have the leeway of taking what he is given. I would prefer a thought process of hit it hard, and if it's an option, deep in the air. A weak groundball to 1st with no outs and a man on second is rarely a good thing. That player deserves far less recognition than the player who may, or instance, lines one sharply down the line but just foul, and then lines out to short. At least that 2nd guy gave you a couple of really good swings, and a chance for a nice inning. I would bet the vast majority of so called "productive outs" don't actually lead to the production of runs anyway. So, while a deep fly ball to the OF is clearly better than a strikeout with a man on 3rd and less than 2 outs, the whole topic of strikeouts, their perceived and actual negative value, and how they relate to so-called "productive outs", isn't worth the amount of time and thought put into the discussion.