Maybe it's my paranoia kicking in, but there seems to be an attitude among the people who favor stats that their stats trump years of experience. They'll give lip service to the perspective of experience but 'when the rubber meets the road' they have much more faith in statistics than they do in those who've played and coached.
IMHO stats and experience are equal - there's a good - and EQUAL - place for both. I've been following stats ever since Bill James' first Baseball Abstracts, the ones with the paper covers, and I've learned a lot about baseball from stats, but that doesn't mean that everything I know is statistically oriented.
Before I retired I worked at a plant where the manufacturing process was part art and part science. We'd have people with an engineering degree straight out of college come into the plant and immediately tell the machine operators how to run their machines according to the operational statistics they'd learned in college. The thing they eventually learned is that their statistics only go so far. When both the engineers and the machine operators learned that there was room for both science and art in the manufacturing process the quality and quantity of our product improved. There was room for both there, as there is in baseball and to insist that either of them is "wrong" is foolhardy.