KEEP UP WITH THE GAME
Baseball does not wait for you to find the right menu. Scoring a play should take one tap, and getting it wrong should cost you nothing.
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The gap between one at-bat and the next is short. If entering a play takes four taps and a submenu, you fall behind, and once you are behind you start guessing. Guessed plays are how a scorebook becomes fiction.
So the whole thing is built around entry speed. Tap the cell, tap the outcome, look back up at the field. If the play was unusual, type the notation yourself, which is still faster than digging through a list of every possible fielding combination.
1B, 2B, HR, K, BB, F7, G3. The outcomes that make up most of a game are right there when the cell opens.
4-6-3 for the double play, F8 for a fly to center. Type what you would have written with a pencil.
Walk then a stolen base? Enter "BB, SB" in the same cell. When the lineup bats around, add the second at-bat the same way.
At-bats and hits add up from the plays you entered. No columns to tally in the parking lot afterward.
It happens. Somebody talks to you, the ball goes in the gap, and suddenly you have missed two batters. On paper this is where scorekeepers quietly invent a groundout and move on.
Here you just go back and fill in the boxes you skipped. Cells are not locked in order. The totals update to match. Nothing about the book has to be a guess.
This is a scoring app for people scoring games as they are played. Parents in the stands, coaches in the dugout, and fans who still like keeping the book at the ballpark.
If you are entering a game from a box score after the fact, it works fine for that too. But it was designed for the version where the next pitch is already coming.
Learn the notation before your next game, or brush up on the marks you never quite pinned down.
Browse all guidesSign up free and try it during an actual game. That is the only test that tells you anything.
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