Juice's Lecture Notes wrote:
Joe Orr Road Rod wrote:
But they're not "proofs". There is way too much noise and too many assumptions being made.
Just since the time McCracken discovered that balls in play "normalized" around 30% I have read countless "yeah buts" and amendments.
Ok, so you don't know what a proof is. To what "noise" are you referring, specifically, and how has it not been accounted for in these non-proof proofs?

I do know what a proof is and these theories regarding where baseballs go are not proofs.
The vast majority of baseball "research" doesn't stand up to scientific rigor. It's great fodder for message boards though.
Which ones and how so? What facets of them are unscientific or violate accepted statistical practices? Be specific.