This was the second game of the 2011 season for the two teams, which is most interesting to me because Carlos Carrasco got the start for the Indians. Carrasco would of course not really emerge as a good major league starter until late in the season in 2014 (or 2015 if you prefer a full-season performance to make that determination), but the Tribe’s rotation to open 2011 was Fausto Carmona, Carrasco, Justin Masterson (who would emerge as the #1 starter), Josh Tomlin (still a candidate for the rotation in 2016), and Mitch Talbot. Carrasco, surrended five runs in the first two frames then settled in, but was somewhat surprisingly sent out to work the seventh after allowing a sixth run in the sixth.
You also might note the presence of Chris Sale, then working out of the ChiSox pen, mowing down all five Indians he faced, including Ks of lefties Shin-Soo Choo and Travis Hafner. Orlando Cabrera was batting sixth at second base and also fanned.
Looking at the scoresheet I don’t see any new notations or flourishes jumping out, but sometimes I add those as the season goes on and of course minor ones don’t necessarily manifest in each game.
Sunday, February 28, 2016
Sunday, February 21, 2016
#93---TEX @ SEA, 3/17/2010
The scoresheet used here is one that I use for Spring Training games almost exclusively. The diagram of the field allows for a convenient way to record defensive replacements even when you’re not exactly sure where they will be placed in the lineup. In my early scorekeeping days I assumed all substitutions were straight-up, and erased as necessary later. Some managers seemed to make it their personal mission to thwart scorekeepers using that approach by never batting their new third baseman where their departing third basemen hit.
Then I moved on to keeping a separate piece of paper to write down defensive changes, then entering the players into the lineup as they came to the plate. This is a good system, although it involves another piece of paper, and one I still use for the All-Star Game. But if I’m not keeping a pitch-by-pitch record of the game (and even a nut like I usually don’t for spring training), the diagram is handy.
The other different thing about this scoresheet is that in this case, since the scoreboxes are much smaller than I’m accustomed to, I used a hit location scoring system inspired by LL Bean’s scoring system to save space. Thus Julio Borbon’s leadoff single was a flyball single to left; Nelson Cruz’ second inning single a groundball single to center; and Vladimir Guerrero’s fifth inning single a line drive to left.
This must have been one of the last times I watched my first (and fairly brief) childhood baseball idol play. Ken Griffey grounded to first, popped to third, flew to center, and struck out. I was right to dump him for Barry Bonds by late 1995.
Then I moved on to keeping a separate piece of paper to write down defensive changes, then entering the players into the lineup as they came to the plate. This is a good system, although it involves another piece of paper, and one I still use for the All-Star Game. But if I’m not keeping a pitch-by-pitch record of the game (and even a nut like I usually don’t for spring training), the diagram is handy.
The other different thing about this scoresheet is that in this case, since the scoreboxes are much smaller than I’m accustomed to, I used a hit location scoring system inspired by LL Bean’s scoring system to save space. Thus Julio Borbon’s leadoff single was a flyball single to left; Nelson Cruz’ second inning single a groundball single to center; and Vladimir Guerrero’s fifth inning single a line drive to left.
This must have been one of the last times I watched my first (and fairly brief) childhood baseball idol play. Ken Griffey grounded to first, popped to third, flew to center, and struck out. I was right to dump him for Barry Bonds by late 1995.
Saturday, February 13, 2016
#92---CLE @ MIN, 6/4/2009
It has been over five years since I have posted a scoresheet here. A lot has changed in the last five years; most notably in this context, I have less idle time to sit around and scan/upload/write about old scoresheets. But what has not changed is my obsession, my compulsion with keeping score of every game that I sit down to take in, be it in person or on TV or even on the radio (and sometimes, in desperate and sad situations, on internet gametrackers). And so as I thought excitedly about the prospect of watching and scoring the South Africa/Australia WBC qualifier final tonight, on a day with single digit temperatures and a blanket of snow outside, I decided to bring back Weekly Scoresheet.
I may have less free time than I did when I posted scoresheets weekly, but what I really did not have for the last five years was a scanner. Why an adult man with a perfectly decent income could not be bothered for five years to buy a scanner or even a printer is a matter best left unexplored, but I now have such a device, and so I no longer have any excuses. While every 267 weeks does not fit the weekly of the blog's title, I will endeavor to make the frequency of posting at least a little more than every 267 weeks.
Of course, this blog is by definition a vanity project. It has never had a non-negligible number of readers, nor should it. Another person's scoresheets may be interesting for a few examples, gleaning a few different ideas or gawking at terrible handwriting. Were they for the pre-Project Scoresheet era, they may have analytical value; fortunately, my entire life has a baseball fan has been lived in an era in which play-by-play accounts of major league games are preserved as a matter of course. So this blog has no function other than to allow me to reminisce about my own baseball viewing experiences, and that's enough reason for me to maintain it.
The game here is an eminently forgettable game from 2009, but my general pattern for this site is to post one scoresheet from each season of my time keeping score, then go back to the beginning. With a multi-year absence, I'll pick it up again in 2009. I also try to make note of any changes I've made to my personal scorekeeping style for each year, although at this point my memory of what I might have changed six years ago is more than a little hazy. In looking back at the blog archives, it looks like the last wholesale change I made was in 2010, and I have already documented it on this blog .
This Indians/Twins tilt was literally on top of the 2009 Scoresheets folder in my file cabinet. Minnesota battered Fausto Carmona for seven runs over the first two frames, punctuated by a pair of three-run homers from Jason Kubel. Joe Mauer also had a fine Mauer-type game in his MVP season, drawing a walk, hitting three singles, and scoring four runs. Scott Baker no-hit the Tribe through 4 1/3 before Mark DeRosa doubled; later Chris Gimenez would homer to center of Baker in the 7th inning on a 0-1 pitch for his first major league hit.
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