This was meant to be an innocent comment, but it won't fit, so here we go. I'd just like to humbly point out a few naive observations. Let's reorganize thoughts as follows: > **Weak BSD** For any global field $K$ and any abelian variety $A$ defined over $K$, we have: $$\text{ord}_{s=1}L(A/K,s) = \text{rk}_{\mathbf{Z}}A(K).$$ > **BSD** For any global field $K$ and any abelian variety $A$ defined over $K$, we have: > (1) $\text{Sha}(A/K)$ is a finite abelian group. > (2) $\rho :=\text{ord}_{s=1}L(A/K,s) = \text{rk}_{\mathbf{Z}}A(K).$ > (3) $\lim_{s\to 1}L(A/K,s)(s-1)^{-\rho} = \frac{R_A\cdot\Omega_A\cdot\#\text{Sha}(A/K)}{|\Delta_K|^{1/2}\cdot \# A(K)_{\rm tor}\cdot\# A^{\vee}(K)_{\rm tor}}.$ > **Super-weak BSD** The proportion of abelian varieties defined over $K$ that satisfy Weak BSD above, is 100%. If $K$ is the global function field of a smooth projective geometrically irreducible curve over $\mathbf{F}_q$, then it is known by work of Tate, Milne, Bauer, Schneider, Kato, Trihan, that **Weak BSD** is equivalent to **BSD**, and **BSD** is in turn equivalent to finiteness of the $\ell$-primary torsion in the Tate-Shafarevich group for some prime $\ell$ (allowed to be the characteristic of $K$). If $K$ is a number field, the above stream of equivalences is still expected to be true, but not known yet, likely because there's still no robust cohomological method to put us in the position to mimic the flat cohomology/crystalline-syntomic cohomology methods employed in the positive characteristic case, which Iwasawa theory for abelian varieties was partially meant for. Let us grant for a moment the following: > **Expectation** Let $K$ be a number field. For any abelian variety $A$ defined over $K$, the following are equivalent: > (1) $\text{Sha}(A/K)$ is finite. > (2) For all primes $\ell$, the $\ell$-primary torsion subgroup in $\text{Sha}(A/K)$ is finite. > (3) For some prime $\ell$, the $\ell$-primary torsion subgroup in $\text{Sha}(A/K)$ is finite. > (4) **Weak BSD** is true for $A$. > (5) **Strong BSD** is true for $A$. This expectation, a Theorem if $K$ were a positive characteristic global function field, reveals the problem is really about *showing finiteness of $\text{Sha}(A/K)(\ell)$*. Over number fields, it is not even known that $\text{Sha}(A/K)(\ell)$ vanishes for almost all primes $\ell$. The takeaway from the Bhargava-Skinner-Zhang paper, and from the answers and comments here, is that knowledge of finiteness $\text{Sha}(A/K)(\ell)$ does not actually help much or at all to improve their progress on **Super-weak BSD** ($\text{Sha}$-finiteness enters through the parity conjecture, a theorem unconditionally, and definitely a much weaker statement than finiteness of $\text{Sha}(A/K)(\ell)$), which to me just means such methods fail to get to the point of the problem itself, and will not solve it. > In other words, I don't see any trace of the ability to produce interesting algebraic cycles on abelian varieties, into them, and according to the **Expectation** above, true in char $p$ though open in char $0$ so far, this should be the whole point. Regardless, clearly **Super-weak BSD**, which is what the discussion in the question, comments, and around the Bhargava-Skinner-Zhang paper, were about, is **not** equivalent to **weak BSD** under any circumstances, no matter that $K = \mathbf{Q}$ and $A$ is $1$-dimensional. *Showing 100% of elliptic curves over $\mathbf{Q}$ satisfy the BSD conjecture does not show **weak BSD** (as the OP took care to make clear in his/her question). Such result, if ever available, should be regarded as being motivational only.* EDIT: I should also add that several of the averages (both unconditional and conjectural) that are key to the Bhargava-Skinner-Zhang methods, fail in char $p$, while I'd regard a method towards BSD to be "promising", if it were able to make progress or settle its char $p$ counterpart, first.