FOR THE PERSON WITH THE BOOK
Scorekeeping is a job somebody has to do, and usually that somebody is you. This is built for the person doing the work, not the people watching the results.
Start Scoring FreeFree forever. Pro upgrade just $4.99, one time.
The person keeping the book is not there to enjoy the game the way everyone else is. You are tracking outs, watching where the ball is hit, catching the substitution nobody announced, and staying one pitch behind at most.
An app for that job has a narrow set of requirements. It has to be quick, it has to be forgiving, and it has to stay out of the way. Everything else is decoration.
6-3, F8, ꓘ, FC, SAC. Score the way you learned to score. Nothing was renamed to be friendlier.
A ruling changes, you misheard a name, you scored the wrong row. Tap and fix it. The totals follow along.
Add pinch hitters and new pitchers whenever they come in. The lineup is not locked at nine.
Nobody is watching your scorecard. There is no leaderboard, no sharing prompt, no notification pulling you back.
A lot of scorekeepers did not sign up for it. The coach handed you the book because you were standing closest to the dugout, and now you have a job you were never taught.
You are not going to learn a hundred years of notation between innings, and you do not have to. Score what you are sure about. Leave the rest. A book with honest gaps beats a book full of invented groundouts.
When you want to fill those gaps in, start with how to use a baseball scorebook, or the youth baseball scorekeeping guide if you are working a Little League game.
Symbols, pitch counts, youth rules, and reading a book someone else scored.
Browse all guidesFree to start, and the free tier is enough to score a real game and decide for yourself.
Create Your Free AccountNo credit card required