I'm sharpening my skills
Good for you dude. But it's not the centrifugal force alone. It's the balance of the friction, coriolis, centrifugal and pressure-gradient forces of the incoming air parcels that determine whether the air will spin into the center or not. But we shouldn't get overwhelmed with that. Your original point is well-taken, and we can just watch it and visually assess whether these forces are balancing out - I believe that that's what the NHC guys are still doing at this "relatively" early point in our history of understanding these systems. There are no equations extant yet that will tell us whether the spin will hold or not. The best meteorologists can do right now for Cape Verde systems is measure the MLAEJ, the strength of the southwest monsoon winds, the amount of moisture and shear present (look at the skew-ts), and other local variables, and then determine through our "primitive" equations if all of the basic ingredients are looking positive or not. What that boils down to is that some of you guys are really good at saying a storm will develop when all of the experts get it wrong. Keep waching and teaching everybody else. There must be something you're seeing that the equations are not.
I really admire how much the severe storms experts for U.S. severe weather rely on storm-chasers and spotters. They realize the value of those guys. You "hurricane" guys who spend a huge amount of time watching satellite, radar and other data are "watchful eyes" that eventually tell the experts so much about what's really going on in these systems.
Having said that, I need a break. I'm burning out. But i do agree with you that we need to cover the details so we do the proper science. And you are really good at demanding to see the right science. I'm just falling out...