NOTHING TO PRINT, NOTHING TO CARRY
Pull up the scorecard in your browser, fill in the lineups, and start scoring. No printing a blank sheet the morning of the game. No hunting for a pencil in the third inning.
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If you have ever scored a game on paper, you already know how this works. Batting order down the left side. Innings across the top. One box per at-bat, and you fill in what happened. That is the scorecard people have used for more than a century, and we did not reinvent it.
What changed is where it lives. Instead of a printed sheet on a clipboard, the scorecard opens in your browser on whatever device is closest. Phone in the stands. Tablet in the dugout. Laptop on the couch during a nationally televised game. Same scorecard, same notation, no printer required.
Nothing to download if you do not want to. Go to the site, log in, and the scorecard is there.
Lineup grid, inning columns, pitcher lines, and a linescore across the top. It looks like a scorecard because it is one.
Every play is saved to your account the moment you enter it. Close the tab mid-game and pick up right where you left off.
Blank scorecard PDFs are fine until the ink runs out an hour before first pitch. This one is always ready.
Enter the two teams, the date, and the ballpark. Takes about ten seconds.
Type each batter and pick a defensive position from the dropdown. Add pinch hitters later whenever they come in.
Tap the box where the batter meets the inning. Pick a common outcome like 1B, K, or BB, or type notation like 6-3 or F8 yourself.
When the last out is recorded, mark the game final. Hits and at-bats are already tallied for you.
New to keeping score? Start with our guide to scoring a baseball game and the scoring symbols reference.
Parents at Little League games who got handed the book and want something more forgiving than pen on paper. Coaches tracking a pitcher's workload across a season. Fans at the ballpark who like keeping score but stopped carrying a scorebook years ago.
None of them are trying to run a professional stats operation. They just want a scorecard that is there when the game starts and still there next week when they want to look back at it.
We have written up everything we know about keeping score, from your first inning to reading a book someone else filled out.
Browse all guidesSign up free, open the scorecard, and fill in a lineup. You can be scoring before the first pitch.
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