It's odd. But I remember reading an article in some sports mag. long long ago--mid-sixties, I think, pointing out (the math is easy) that the bunt sacrifice in and of itself was counter-productive (it only really got popular because it was used by pitchers, most of whom couldn't hit at all). I've thus never liked it, and MONEYBALL put the last nail in the coffin. That book (it was that book, wasn't it?), claimed it was only popular because of what it was called--the name sounded virtuous. To me, the most absurd scoring rule about the sacrifice is when a batter bunts trying to get a hit. If he is thrown out and it looks as if he were trying to get a hit, rather than deliberately trying to get an out, he doesn't get credit for a sacrifice! (That is ridiculous!) It is as if he was being too self-interested, and that (we know) is morally wrong. Why, then, not deny a batter credit for a sacrifice fly if it looks as if he were ACTUALLY trying to hit a home run or a base hit?