Tuesday, August 25, 2020

#157---BAL @ CLE, 5/25/1997




I’m always torn about posting the dreadful Excel scoresheet – it’s so bad, yet they are also some of the earliest extant scoresheets I have to post. Thankfully, I’ve almost exhausted the supply at this point.

The lack of detail on these is best illustrated by Marquis Grissom’s first inning, in which he singled and then was caught stealing (simply indicated by “C”). The Indians got a good game from David Justice with a single, two walks, and a homer for three runs scored and two driven in. I don’t have any idea why I didn’t record the Orioles ninth, but after reading the Baseball-Reference account, maybe it was a way of suppressing a near-disaster:

Surhoff singled
Webster struck out
Tarasco walked, advancing Surhoff to second
Incavaiglia, hitting for Bordick, singled, advancing Surhoff to third and Tarasco to second
Reboulet ran for Bordick
Anderson doubled, scoring Surhoff and Tarasco, advancing Reboulet to third
Alomar was intentionally walked
Davis struck out
Alvin Morman relieved Mike Jackson (for some reason pitchers get full names on this scoresheet but batters don’t)
Palmeiro struck out

Final: Cleveland 7, Baltimore 6

Tuesday, August 18, 2020

#156---TOR @ NYA, 2/22/2020


2/22 is the earliest date for a major league game ever chronicled on this blog, and is probably the earliest date for a major league game I’ve ever consumed. Unfortunately, that early start to games turned out to be completely unnecessary in 2020. It looks as if the scoresheet doesn’t have lines separating the scoreboxes, but they were in fact very faint and didn’t pick up the scan – I have nowhere near the spatial awareness that would be required to pull off scorekeeping without lines. The transparency makes the field diagrams on the right side of the sheet unrecognizable; I find those very helpful for spring training games to keep track of where the subs are playing in the field before it becomes clear where they are appearing in the batting order. And since I often eschew tracking pitches for such games, there’s room to facilitate it.

The most notable thing about the game was that it was a scoreless spring training game for five innings. The eventual winning run scored with one out and runners on the corners in the top of the seventh, the Blue Jays pulled off the delayed double steal play that I hate so much when employed by OSU coach Greg Beals. It worked here, with Anthony Alford swiping home while some guy named Wall advanced to second.  It was quite an inning for Alford; after lining a single to center as the leadoff man, he stole second and third with one out and then home during the next at bat.

Friday, August 14, 2020

Bonus --- SD @ LA, 8/13/2020



I didn't catch this whole game last night - MLBN didn't start showing it until 10:00, but first pitch had been at 9:40. I wasn't sure if I was going to stay up for the whole game, but Padres/Dodgers is an interesting matchup right now, so I figured I would keep a scaled-down scoresheet (I don't generally like tracing the diamond, and usually I track pitches) that I would have zero guilt about abandoning if sleep seemed more attractive as the innings went on. 

Instead, Mookie Betts made sure that I was interested to the end, tying a major league record by recording his sixth game with three homers. He ended up reaching base all five trips, although a squibber up the third base line in his last at bat was a bit of a letdown. 

Tuesday, August 11, 2020

#155---NYA @ HOU, 4/9/2019


Not that a typical Yankees/Astros game in recent years wouldn’t be interesting, but this one definitely looks more interesting in retrospect after the scandal and given that Gerrit Cole, who started this game for Houston, is now in the Bronx. A few plays in this game to note, mostly for the scoring:

* The New York third ended when Brett Gardner bunted into a double play, catcher – short – first

* Jose Altuve’s third inning homer was the 100th of his career

* In the home eighth, Alex Bregman struck out swinging, but Austin Romine couldn’t handle it and he reached on a passed ball. Aledmys Diaz pinch-ran after the second pitch of Brantley’s at bat – I don’t recall what happened and didn’t note it, but I’m assuming it was some kind of injury scare. You can see that the substitution happened after the second pitch because I noted “PR Diaz 4-8 (AB)”, meaning that Diaz pinch ran during the 8th inning at bat of the fourth place hitter, with “AB” indicating “after B” – that is, after the second pitch of the at bat.

Tuesday, August 4, 2020

#154---CLE @ ARI, 2/24/2018




This was the first game I had the opportunity to score in 2018, and since I was doing it off the radio I did not keep a pitch-by-pitch account (this is bad enough to do off the radio, but for exhibition games it’s completely hopeless because the announcers will invariably interview someone and you’re lucky if they tell you the direction a batted ball is hit, let alone what happened on the 1-1 pitch or even if there was a 1-1 pitch. That didn’t stop me from trying in the past, but no more.)

The Indians broke the game open with a six-run, three-homer ninth inning, forcing Arizona to run their total of pitchers used to ten. Given the limited space on the sheet, I did not bother marking RBI, and really I should consider doing that on all my sheets…I don’t care about them as a statistical category and if you really want to know, you can count them from by examining the PBP account, which after all is the whole point of keeping a scoresheet.