Showing posts with label Scoring. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Scoring. Show all posts

Friday, April 18, 2014

Complete Game Scorecard: April 17th: #BlueJays at #Twins - Game 3

Game Summary: 'The Strangest game I have ever seen.'

Jays had a 2 run lead going into the bottom of the 8th - Steve Delabar was tapped to start the inning. He walked 2 and then 7-hitter Eduardo Nunez (3B) sac bunted them over. That's when Blue Jays' manager John Gibbins decided Sergio Santos the stopper, had better come in and try to get himself a 5-Out Save with two runners in scoring position.

It didn't work.

Santos walked his first batter with the pitches looking wild. Then the nine hitter - pinch hitter Kurt Suzuki - waited for his walk while watching two wild pitches tie the game. One-hitter, Brian Dozier watched another wild pitch plate the go-ahead run before he too walked. That was the end of Santos as J.A. Happ was brought in.

But that wasn't the end of it. Happ walked his first batter to load 'em up - and then the next one as well, for the starting-to-get-predictable RBI Base-On-Balls. Then Happ gave up the landmark first Hit of the inning(!) plating two more to put the icing on the blow-out, eighth inning cake.

All told, the Twins sent 13 batters to the plate in the inning; walked 7 times and plated 6 runs on 1 hit. Half the runs scored via wild pitches by Santos.

The strangest game I have ever seen.


On a bright note - I was able to keep up while scoring the crazy eighth, with the new Canvas scorecard, which was fast and responsive. 'Tight' would be the word I would use to describe it. I was able to publish the eighth inning about 30 seconds after the last out.

In fact, I was having so much fun early on in the night - that in the 3rd inning I shot another video of me scoring the game Live in the Blogger Compose Interface. This one was an update on how to easily score using the colour coded base-runner notation functionality that this new Canvas Mark-up of the Internet Baseball Scorecard affords. The interface is now so quick and easy that I was able to shoot and post a video of me scoring in the 3rd ... and now in the 7th (when I wrote this part), write this blog while scoring the end of the game at the same time.(little did I know what was coming!).

Speed is key - because the whole point of scoring the game on the computer, is to also write baseball copy about the game at the same time - because as baseball copy hacks have done since the late 1800's - filing their stories with their editor quickly is paramount. It's usually expected about an hour after the game ends.

(This one's a little later than that standard because the turning point in the game happened late - and was tumultuous. Plus the game ended just minutes after the long chaos ceased - with a 1,2,3 Jays top of the ninth.)


Read every play in an html5 Canvas Scorecard for Blogger - with text and colour-coded base-runner-progress notation.

Internet Baseball Scorecard | April 17th: BlueJays at Twins - Gm 3 | http://internetbaseballscorecard2013.blogspot.ca/2014/04/april-17th-blue-jays-at-twins-gm-3.html


Her's the Video I shot of me scoring in the 3rd - showing the excellent functionality of the Blogger Compose Interface with this coding (best practice gleaned so far - this is only the third game I've scored with the new Mark-up).

Scoring Demonstration - Internet Baseball Scorecard, April 17th Blue Jays at Twins Gm 3



From under the video:
How to use the Blogger Compose interface to colour code base-runner notations in the Internet Baseball Scorecard - Canvas Version, using high-light double-clicks and the Blogger colour pallets for Text Color and Text Background Color buttons.


An addendum:

I want to talk about a scoring notation that I did in the eighth during Kurt Susuki's At-Bat. This particular situation has never occurred for me in 25 years of scoring ball games.

Here's an image of the 8th Inning and the At-Bat Box in question - the ninth batter in the order:

Note the mess of notations in the first line of the southeast quadrant of the 9th batter's at-bat box in the 8th Inning. Below is that copied out of the box at the scorecard and simply pasted into this page.

ph/WP#5,6,8-IB/pr(#8)WP6,8-1B
BB
pr

The first line of the At-Bat box is reserved for events that happen before the batter hits the ball into play - or in the case of this particular at-bat - (in fact he did not put the ball in play) - before he walked;

ph followed by a forward slash. The forward slash separates one event from another. "ph" This is the first event that happened after that batter stepped into the at-bat box. 'ph' stands for "pinch hitter". It denotes that the batter in the line-up so far in this game, has at this point been replaced by a different batter. By checking the far left of the scorecard you can see that K Susuki pinch hit for E Escobar in the 8th. (" 8th PH K Suzuki")

Next event that happens before the completion of the at-bat (not including pitches thrown, fouls, balls, strikes called, swings) : "WP#5,6,8-IB"  'WP' means "Wild Pitch" The next set of notation right after WP indicate runners movements on the base-paths. The bases are loaded. #5 means the 5th batter in the order - and then to save space I just add a comma directly after the 5 and add 6 and 8 as well - then dash, and then "1B". 1B means all those base-runners - #5, #6 and #8 - moved one base. So in this case the #5 batter-runner went from 3rd Base to Home Plate. The #6 batter-runner moved from 2nd base to 3rd base and the #8 batter-runner moved from 1st base to 2nd base.

Then a slash separating events and then, "pr(#8)". 'pr' means "Pinch Runner" followed directly by (#8) which notes that the #8 batter-runner has been replaced (he's now at 2nd base remember - now in scoring position, and importantly late in the game, he represents the 'go-ahead' run). Twins Manager Ron Gardenhire replaced the #8 batter-runner with his fastest man in order to give his team the best chance they have to win the game.

(I forgot to add a slash here) The next element in this scoring - the next thing that happens is "WP6,8-1B". Again you recognize this from the second element, it's another wild pitch "WP" - immediately followed by "6,8" (the #6 batter-runner and the #8 batter-runner) and than a dash, and then "1B". Meaning of coarse, the 6 batter and the 8 batter advance one base each. In this case the 6 batter scored a run and the 8 batter moved from 2nd base to 3rd base.

The nest line down is the usual scoring notation for Base on Balls ("BB"). Once Susuki is on base the manager replaces him with a pinch runner - in order to give his team the best change they have to score an 'insurance run' if they should take the lead in the game by plating the #8 batter-runner now on 3rd base; and, also to make turning a double play by the defence harder by having a fast runner at 1st base.

And that's it. :)



mh

Wednesday, April 16, 2014

Complete Game Scorecard: April 15th: #BlueJays at #Twins - Game 1


In the 3rd inning I shoot a video of me explaining how I'm scoring the game in Blogger - Live.

Read every play in an html5 Canvas Scorecard for Blogger - with text and colour-coded base-runner-progress notation.

Internet Baseball Scorecard | April 15th: Blue Jays at Twins - Gm 1 | http://internetbaseballscorecard2013.blogspot.ca/2014/04/april-15th-blue-jays-at-twins-gm-1.html

Game Summary:

Jays good enough - then in the ninth - 3 walks in a row and then a homie for Lawrie erases Save opportunity.

Brandon Morrow an't find it - just 3.2 IP.

Bullpen gives up one run over 5.1 IP


 Watch me scoring the game Live in the Blogger Compose Interface, shot in the 3rd and posted on the scorecard in the 6th inning:

Scoring a Baseball Game Live in the Internet Baseball Scorecard





mh

Monday, April 7, 2014

New HTML5 Canvas Baseball Scorecard gets put through her paces - and passes with Flying Colours!

Complete Game Scorecard: Internet Baseball Scorecard | "April 7th: Orioles at Yankees - Game 1" | http://internetbaseballscorecard2013.blogspot.ca/2014/04/april-7th-orioles-at-yankees-game-1.html

Scored Live by the author.
Internet Baseball Scorecard
A DIY html baseball scoresheet for scorekeeping baseball games in Blogger

Via the brand new HTML5 Canvas Baseball Scorecard mark-up written by Michael Holloway.

New HTML5/JavaScript coding works like a charm.



I encourage baseball scorekeepers to give it a try.

Use the code from the page source and lay it into a Blogger blog tailored with a 4000 pixel height and a 2000 pixel width.


Creative Commons License


Condition of Use: On publish, Attribute the "Internet Baseball Scorecard by Michael Holloway" and add a link to where you found it - and stipulate this Condition of Use whenever you publish. This is Open Source code - feel free to re-code it for any style, design or purpose you wish.



mh

Sunday, August 5, 2012

Scoring baseball via good old radio: lazy play by play and neo-liberal macro-engineering

Wrote this yesterday while scoring a Blue Jays' game off the radio, at The FAN 590 Toronto (see link to the scorecard below):


Accurate Reporting & Scoring

Scoring off the radio broadcast today on the FAN 590 Toronto with Jerry Howarth and Alan Ashby, and I'd just like to provide some constructive criticism by saying that I've had to go the MLB Gameday Play by Play 'thinger' on several occasions so far today beacause the broadcasters are not narrating the story concisely.

For example, in the Jays' 2nd on Gose's double to left centre, no one mentioned that it was CF Reddick who fielded the ball and threw to SS Rosales at cut-off (who then threw to Toronto's own, C George Kottaras for the out at home). That happens often, especially with lots going on.

I should note ESPN's automatic Play-by-Play narrative also does not mention who threw the ball to whom on that play. As well, the ESPN widget regularly calls 1B to Pitcher covering a "ground out to first" - which in my universe means 3UA, rather than 3-1 (out by pitcher covering). It makes a big difference in the stats: the way the widget records the play, the first baseman gets a Put Out; the way it actually happened, the pitcher gets the PO and the 1B gets an Assist.

As we advance towards much better defensive stat keeping it would be nice if the old school stats we do keep for defence were at least accurately kept. MLB Advanced Media supplies all the necessary info for a complete and accurate record of each game; it is all available through an API - it's just a matter of building an interface which supports the data stream. (I guess I''ll have to do it.)


The Radio Meme

The between inning advertising on the FAN590 features an ad from the Power Workers Union that starts off with 'did you know that wind power generators are off half the time?' ... and later, 'instead we can use bio-mass technology to fire generators that are carbon neutral'.

What they're talking about is 'strip mining' the northern boreal forest. The northern boreal forest is a band of forest that starts generally, on a latitude marked by the northern edge of Lake Superior (see image).

Northern Boreal Forest - image via Wikimedia commons - http://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/5/5d/Taiga_ecoregion.png

'Strip mining forestry' (my term) is a new kind of forestry practice. The industry here in Ontario calls it 'whole tree harvesting'. Basically they harvest all the trees in a forest as in clear-cut forestry - but now, towards a leap in efficiency, they harvest the tops, the branches and now - the stump and roots as well.

With almost all funiture now made out of fibreboard, and most housing sheathing materials made out of composites, these new sources of chipped wood and fibre are important; but now the forest industry sees a slow down in consumer demand. Housing starts in the US are down due to the housing collapse, the continuing global economic crisis and the neo-liberal remedy - austerity - is reducing demand for new disposable furniture; like that which Ikea sells. How is the forest industry to maintain profit rates during an forced economic slow down while at the same time maintain their control of global forest sources going forward? The brilliant plan: burn biomass from whole tree harvesting.

Makes you want to vote for more nuclear power stations, doesn't it?

The Northern and Southern boreal forests are one of the biggest 'Carbon Sinks' on the planet. Biomass fired electricity generators are not carbon neutral at all. What we're doing is reducing the planet's ability to sequester carbon; and at the same time releasing thousands of years of natural biomass carbon sequestering through burning. By my reading of several papers on this, it appears, depending on species, that about half the biomass of a tree is in the root system - that biomass in the ground rotting then returns nutrients to the soil that inturn feeds the next generation of growth.

The Power Worker Union claim they are lobbying the Provincial government to go with biomass electricity production - but it's more likely that the Union and the Province are working together - just like they did in the run up to the last Provincial Election. This play by the Province - where the Power Workers Union play the ignorant blue collar moron; and the Province plays the prince all shinny in white to the rescue with the science, the white collar smarts, the nuclear solution - is a play designed to divide the sentiments of the environmentally aware, university educated, white collar urban voter. The thing is, we have to double electricity rates because the nuclear power stations only last half the time we thought they would when we we built them - so now: How to raise electricity rates by 100% and at the same time build 4 Trillion dollars worth of new reactors?

Macro-engineering of the population through deception - that's how.

In my opinion, wind, solar, tidal power and perhaps orbital solar collection delivered by lasers are the answers. We need to invest in these technologies and perfect them; along side a rebuild of existing reactor cores and a modest expansion of this very expensive nuclear power technology to serve the gap in the near term.

Because of the macho-war-culture jingoism in all the ads on Rogers Inc, I can't watch baseball on TV with out muting commercials; now I have to turn off the radio between innings now too because of these evil doings there.

Looks like it's Toronto Maple Leafs semi-pro ball at Christie Pits, or the University League at Stan Waldlow for me... .

Maybe that was always where I had to end up. Outside, in a Park.

This media is no country for old men.



References:

Blogger Baseball Scorecard | 08/04/2012 Blue Jays at Athletics Game 3 Scorecard | http://internetbaseballscorecard.blogspot.ca/2012/08/08042012-blue-jays-at-athletics-game-3_5994.html

Government of Canada | Canadian Forest Service Publications | Effects of forest biomass harvesting on soil productivity in boreal and temperate forests – A review. 2011. Thiffault, E.; Hannam, K.D.; ParĂ©, D.; Titus, B.D.; Hazlett, P.W.; Maynard, D.G.; Brais, S. Environ. Rev. 19:278-309. - http://cfs.nrcan.gc.ca/publications?id=32736

Government of Ontario | Ministry of Natural Resources | A BRIEF REVIEW OF THE ISSUES SURROUNDING FULL TREE HARVESTING [PDF] | by Alan Wiensczyk | http://www.mnr.gov.on.ca/stdprodconsume/groups/lr/@mnr/@nwsi/documents/document/mnr_e005393.pdf





mh

Friday, April 1, 2011

Blogger Baseball Scorecard presents a Free Printable Classic Scorecard

"Blogger Baseball Scorecard" free baseball score sheet (1,600px × 1,574px JPEG Image)


I don't have a printer so I don't know the ins and outs of that meme. None-the-less, I've up-loaded the original size here - it's 1,600px × 1,415px - if you click on the image it opens at it's own page reduced, then left click on the image to see full awesome grandness, then select 'copy', open Microsoft Paint or other such editing application, paste it (click on EDIT top left select paste from, a window opens paste in the web address into the file box and click open); save it - and print it from there. That way you'll always have a copy to print from every time you need a scorecard!

(Is there a simpler way? Please let me know. :)

The Creative Commons Attribution 2.5 Canada License is on the image - so print out lots of copies and pass them around to all your baseball playing friends.

Please let me know, if you would, whether this lay out works well in a paper and pencil - as you may know, this printable scorecard is just a picture of this Blogs Blogger Baseball Scorecard; it was produced to score games online - in a blog - live. But it looks just like the old style scorecards - so it should work - right?

Cheers. :)

I am very happy with my new upgraded "Screen Capture Elite" - it grabbed a 2.51 MB (3495px X  3438px) copy from my screen - unfortunately Blogger only allowed 397.6 KB (1,600px × 1,574px)

:(

Below is a screenshot of the top half of the Blogger Baseball Scorecard.




















( http://bit.ly/PrintableBaseballScorecard )


This article was originally published in the Blogger Baseball Scorecard - 03 31 2011.




mh

Saturday, August 7, 2010

Score Card Blog: Tampa Bay Rays @ Toronto Blue Jays - Game 2



Today at 1:07 I'll be Live Bloggging an Internet Score Card of Tampa Bay Rays @ Toronto Blue Jays - Game 2

Click on the headline below and head over to my score card blog The Internet Baseball Score Card Blog and watch the story unfold.

Live Score Card Blog: Tampa Bay Rays @ Toronto Blue Jays - Game 2








mh

Saturday, June 12, 2010

ScorePAD evalulation



Scoring scoresheets for iphone have been around for a while, but nothing open source until May 2010 when 6-4-3 Baseball Scorecard for Android came out. This has probably lead the standard in pad scoring ScorePad to release this evaluation version (ScorePAD V8) of their proprietary software. I've set it up with lineups for today's Toronto Blue Jays at Colorado Rockies - Game 2 (Scored Live tonight at the Internet Baseball Score Card (IBSC) Blog, 8:10PM EDT 6:10 PM MDT). I loaded in yesterdays lineup with today's probable pitchers - it may change.

The ScorePad has all the buttons I imagined when I began building my DIY Score Card.

You high-light the batter who's at the plate and then, if they hit the ball for a single, you go to the batter row to the right of the lineup section that has a selection scroll beneath it, click '1B', a green angled area appears in the AB box along where the first base line would be - indicating Fred Lewis is on first base.


There's no way for me to share this live with you in internet land, except by taking a 'print screen' shot of it with my Windows OS - like I've done here.



mh

Friday, June 11, 2010

Toronto Blue Jays @ Colorado Rockies - Game 1



Friday, June 11, 2010 the Internet Baseball Score Card Blog presents, a complete game box score:
Toronto Blue Jays @ Colorado Rockies - Game 1
Starting at 9:10 PM ET a Live Blog
Toronto Blue Jays @ Colorado Rockies - Game 1 from
Coors Field, Denver, Colorado
Starting Pitchers: Ricky Romero (5-2, 3.06 ERA) - Ubaldo Jimenez (11-1, 0.93 ERA)

Internet Baseball Score Card Blog link: Toronto Blue Jays @ Colorado Rockies - Game 1





mh

Tuesday, June 8, 2010

Toronto Blue Jays @ Tampa Bay Rays - Game 1



Internet Baseball Score Card Blog presents, Toronto Blue Jays @ Tampa Bay Rays - Game 1, a complete game box score. A handy reference while watching or listening to the game!

Internet Baseball Score Card Blog: Toronto Blue Jays @ Tampa Bay ...

8 Jun 2010 ... Toronto Blue Jays @ Tampa Bay Rays - Game 1 7:10 PM ET, June 8, 2010. Tropicana Field, St. Petersburg, Florida SP Brian Curtis Tallet (1-1, 4.63 ERA) SP Jeffrey Warren Niemann (5-0, 2.79 ERA) Forecast high today; 33°C | 98°F Wind: NNW 21 kph | 13 mph ..... Pitching, SP Brian Curtis Tallet (1-1, 4.63 ERA) SP Jeffrey Warren Niemann (5-0, 2.79 ERA)...
problemly.blogspot.com/2010/.../toronto-blue-jays-tampa-bay-rays-game-1.html - 8 hours ago





mh

Monday, June 7, 2010

Live Score Card Blog: Boston Red Sox @ Cleveland Indians - Game 1



Live Blog Box Score starts at 7:05 PM ET, June 7, 2010
Boston Red Sox at Cleveland Indians Game 1
Matsuzaka (4-2, 5.49 ERA) - Carmona (4-4, 3.53 ERA
Progressive Field, Cleveland, Ohio
Weather Forecast: Partly cloudy 20% chance of rain, 22°C | 76°F
Wind, NNW 20 kph | 14 mph (LR)

The Internet Baseball Score Card Blog is a specially formatted blog with extra wide parameters to accomodate a 20 inning score card. Watch Live as every play, every out, every substitution - even every pitch is scored as it happens. It's a great resource while watching or listening to the game!

Click below to have a look - and see you there at 7:05 ET:

Boston Red Sox @ Cleveland Indians - Game 1






mh

Sunday, June 6, 2010

Sunday Night Baseball Live Score Card Blog: Milwaukee Brewers @ St. Louis Cardinals - Game 3



Watch Sunday Night Baseball Milwaukee Brewers @ St. Louis Cardinals Complete Game Live Score Card on the Internet Baseball Score Card Blog
8:05 PM EDT, June 6, 2010
Manny Parra (1-3, 4.06 ERA) vs. Jamie Garcia (5-2, 1.32 ERA)

Click here to watch the game unfold on the extra wide format "Internet Baseball Score Card Blog": Milwaukee Brewers @ St. Louis Cardinals - Game 3.


This is the third game of a three game set. The Cardinals won the first two and can sweep the series tonight. Sweeps doesn't happen that often, so we can hope that maybe the Brewers might grab a win in the most unlikely of situations. Jamie Garcia stands in the way of that unlikely occurrence; for the Brewers to stay in this one they're going to have to get a good start from Manny Parra.






mh

Saturday, June 5, 2010

New York Yankees @ Toronto Blue Jays - Game 2



New York Yankees @ Toronto Blue Jays - Game 2
SP Andy Pettitte (7-1, 2.48 ERA) vs. SP Ricky Romero (5-2, 3.14 ERA)
Saturday, June 5th 2010
1:07 PM EDT
Rogers Centre, Toronto, Ontario, Canada
Weather (forecast): 26°C | 84°F
Wind, W 30 kph | 20 mph (LR)

Watch the game in a Live 9 Inning Score Card Blog at my New Extra-Wide Baseball Scoring Blog, the "Internet Baseball Score Card Blog - Scoring baseball games with a Blogger Baseball Scoring Forum"

New York Yankees @ Toronto Blue Jays - Game 2








mh

Friday, June 4, 2010

Internet Baseball Score Card Blog - new features



My DIY baseball scoring form now includes a 10 inning box score table, columns for scoring the game pitch by pitch, 9 batter AB boxes with room for three subs each, a batters totals column with room for every player who played, a per inning runs, hits, errors and LOB table, and a pitchers line box. All scoring boxes are designed to allow scoring "The Project Scoresheet Way".

Your can download the code for free from my Google Documents post - and score your own game!

Check it out, at my New Extra-Wide baseball scoring forum, the Internet Baseball Score Card Blog.





mh

Wednesday, June 2, 2010

Tampa Bay Rays @ Toronto Blue Jays - Game 3





To see the complete game box score for this game head over to my other Baseball Blog designed especially for scoring baseball games, The Internet Baseball Score Card Blog - Scoring baseball games with a Blogger Baseball Scoring Forum:

Tampa Bay Rays @ Toronto Blue Jays - Game 3


Box Score for Tampa Bay Rays @ Toronto Blue Jays - Game 3
Wednesday, June 2nd 2010
7:07 PM EDT
Rogers Centre, Toronto, Ontario, Canada
Weather: Raining 20°C | 70°F

The Internet Baseball Score Card Blog is set up to allow scoring according to David Cortesi's "Scoring a Baseball Game the Project Scoresheet way".

Final: Tampa Bay Rays 7 - Toronto Blue Jays 3



mh

Monday, May 31, 2010

Sunday Night Baseball - Complete 9 Inning Score Card of the Game



To see the complete game score card, every play, every out go to "Internet Baseball Score Card Blog": Sunday Night Baseball - Complete 9 Inning Score Card of the Game.



Texas Rangers @ Minnesota Twins
Sunday May 30th 2010
8:05 PM ET, 7:05 PM CDT
Target Field, Minneapolis, Minnesota
Weather 19°C | 61°F
Wind: NW 18 kph | 13 mph (LR)


Notes:

Watching on ESPN Sunday Night baseball with commentators Jon Miller, Joe Morgan and Orel Hershiser.


Top of the 9th
V. Guerrero pop to shallow centre, CF Span and 2B Hudson clip each other. Span does a 180 after the ball hits in the pocket of his glove, he hangs on for the win, but Hudson isn't getting up. Announcers saying it was knee on knee...
On the replay it looks like Hudson tripped on Span's shin as he changed direction at the last second. Span's up first after about a half a minute; Hudson walks off the field after about 5 minutes.
The crowds cheers at winning are muted and everyone stays until Orlando is up on his feet.


Final: Texas 3, Minnesota 6



mh

Wednesday, May 26, 2010

Live Score Card Blog: Toronto Blue Jays @ Los Angeles Angels - Game 3



Tonight I'm going to score the Blue Jays @ Los Angeles Angels - Game 3 live on my DIY score card over at the Internet Baseball Score Card Blog.

This is a new version of the score card with regular fonts. Besides being much simpler and shorter in code, for quicker load times, I'm hoping all the data stays in the boxes on all operating systems and browsers. Check it out - Live Blogging begins at 7:05 PM EDT | 4:04 PDT.





mh

Friday, May 21, 2010

Introducing the Internet Baseball Score Card Blog



I've been working on a way to score baseball games in a blogger frame. To this end I've created a blog with an extra wide format (750 pixels instead of the standard 405 pixels).

Tonight, starting at 9:40 PM EDT I'm going to score Toronto Blue Jays @ Arizona Diamondbacks live, play by play.

Introducing the Internet Baseball Score Card blog



mh

Friday, May 14, 2010

Texas Rangers @ Toronto Blue Jays



Friday May 14, 2010
Toronto Ontario Canada
Rogers Centre (Dome is Open!)
Weather 22 C | 72 F degrees, Clear
Wind 35 kph | 21 mph, LR

Well it looks like it's a radio only game today as my cable provider Rogers seems to have ultimate fighting on instead of their already paid-for content - the Rogers owned Toronto Blue Jays.

At 8:00 PM they're airing the 2010 Memorial Cup (Junior A hockey's championship game) - so I'll go Live Blog here for all you die-hards.


Notes

Top of the 3rd
Here come the walks again, this time it's the Jays next pitcher to the slaughter, Roenicke. Thinking of calling strikes "not-balls".

Bottom of the 3rd
Snider's at-bat goes 11 pitches, the pitch after the fifth foul-off is smacked over the CF fence for three runs. Statistically after the 5th foul-off of an at-bat, the batters chances of hitting safely become greater than .500.

Legend:


- on 1st
= on 2nd
--- on 3rd
r = rbi
<> run plated
p pitch count
/// end of inning
E4t E4 throwing
#2s base runner (batting second) stole a base
B bunt
PO pop-up caught

BH base hit
K batter strikes out
Ks batter strikes out swinging
UA un-assisted
#2s batter, second in the order, steals



Texas123456789

E. Andrus SS

BH8
<>

BH8
<>
DP6
4-3
x
-

4-3

-
BB
=

-
-

M. Young 3B

BH7
<>

BB
<>
BH
E6t
=
-

FO9

-
FC
5-2
-
-
-
J. Hamilton LF/CF4th

BH8
<>

Ks


Ks
///
-

FO9
///
-

4-3
///
-
-
V. Guerrero DH
BH5
2r
---
BH9
r
<>
-

HBP
<>
-

Ks

-

BH8
x
-

I. Kinsler 2B
SAC
B
1-3

BB
<>
-

BB
---
-

Ks

-

Ks

-

N. Cruz RF
FO9
SAC
r
2BH
7
3r
-

Ks

-

K
///
-
DP6
4-3
x /
-

J. Smoak 1B

FO8
///

Ks
///
-

BB
x
-
-

PO2
f
-

4-3

M. Ramirez
C
-
HR7
r
<>

BB
<>
SAC
9
x
-
-

BH7
x
-

5-3

C. Gentry CF
-

FO8


BB
x

ph 4th
D Murphy
LF



FC
3-6
- /
-
-
BB
---
x
-

Ks
///


/Inning
123456789Totals
Runs
3
6
1
1
0
0
0
0
0
10
Hits
4
4
1
0
0
0
1
1
0
11
Errors
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
x
0
LOB
1
1
1
2
0
0
3
0
0
8


PitchingIPHRERBBKHRp/sERA
R. Harden
2.2
4
7
7
5
3
2
86-45
4.93
D. Mathis
1.1
7
8
8
2
1
3
49-26
7.36
D Nippert
3.0
1
0
0
0
1
0
47-29
5.48
C. Ray
1.0
0
0
0
0
1
0
9-7
2.76
Pitcher
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-


Texas Team totalsABRHRBIBBKPOALOB
E. Andrus
4
2
2
0
1
0
0
2
1
M. Young
4
2
2
0
1
0
1
2
2
J. Hamilton
5
1
1
0
0
2
1
1
0
V. Guerrero
5
2
3
1
0
1
DH
DH
1
I. Kinsler
2
1
0
0
2
2
4
3
1
N. Cruz
4
0
1
4
0
2
1
0
0
J. Smoak
4
0
0
0
1
1
7
0
0
M. Ramirez
3
2
2
1
1
0
1
0
0
C. Gentry
1
0
0
0
1
0
1
0
0
D. Murphy
2
0
0
0
1
1
2
0
2
Totals
34
10
11
6
8
9
18
8
7


Toronto123-45678

F. Lewis LF

BB
<>

K


BH8
<>

2BH
7
<>
-

FO7

-

Ks


A. Hill 2B

BB
<>

6-3


BB
<>

HR7
3r
<>
-
#9s
4-3
x
-

5-3
///

A. Lind DH

BB
<>

Ks
///
BH
r
<>

HR
r
<>

-

LD4
///
-
-

V. Wells CF
SAC
4-3
r
-

PO3
f
HR7
3r
<>

5-3
///
-
-

4-3

-
L. Overbay 1B
2BH
92r
---
-
HR9
r
<>

BB
-
-
IF
BH6
x
-

BB
<>
-
A. Gonzalez SS

FO9

-

FO8


Ks
///
-
FC
5-4
-
-
2BH
9 r
x
-

J. Bautista 3B

BB
=
-

BH8
<>
-

FO7


PO5

-
BH8
SB=
8-2
-

J. Buck C

BB
-
-

BB
<>
-

BH7
x

FO8
///
-

Ks
///
-

T. Snider RF

Ks

-
HR
3r
<>
-
FC
6-4
<>
-
BH9
SB
---


top 8th
M. McCoy
RF









FO7



/Innings
123456789Totals
Runs
3
0
8
4
0
0
1
0
-
16
Hits
1
0
6
4
1
1
1
0
-
14
Errors
0
0
1
0
0
0
0
0
-
1
LOB
3
0
1
0
1
1
1
0
-
6


PitchingIPHRERBBKHRp/sERA
B. Cecil
2.0
8
8
8
2
2
1
48-28
5.46
J Roenicke
1.1
1
2
2
4
-
-
45-21
6.75
C. Janssen4th
3.0
1
0
0
0
3
0
37-27
4.15
R. Lewis
0.0
0
0
0
2
0
0
11-3
3.24
J Frasor
1.2
1
0
0
0
1
0
17-13
5.74
S. Camp
1.0
0
0
0
0
1
0
10-9
2.79


Tronto Team Totals
ABRHRBIBBSOPOALOB
F. Lewis
5
3
2
0
1
2
0
0
0
A. Hill
4
3
1
3
2
0
2
5
0
A. Lind
4
3
2
2
1
1
DH
DH
0
V. Wells
4
1
1
4
0
0
1
0
0
L. Overbay
3
2
3
3
2
0
7
1
2
A. Gonzalez
5
0
1
1
0
1
1
2
1
J. Bautista
4
1
2
0
1
0
0
2
2
J. Buck
3
1
1
0
2
1
2
1
1
T. Snider
4
2
2
3
0
1
4
0
1
M. McCoy
1
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
Totals
37
16
15
16
9
6
17
11
7

I'm tired now. You can do the rest of the totals yourself if you need to.

What a hellish game to score.

Thanks to ESPN for the pitching lines.


Update: Sunday, May 16, 2010

After some eye time away from ledgers I got back to filling in all the totals boxes today. After adding up the Texan's team totals I found a mistake; they had 10 runs total, not 9 which I had on the run, hits, errors table. I found the mistake when the team totals table added up to 10 runs scored which didn't jive with the /inning totals table. The error was in the 2nd inning, I had the Texans scoring 5 runs while the at-bat boxes showed 6 runs plated; I added the run and everything balanced.

Completing your score card is like accounting, all the ledgers must balance; if they don't you have to find your error.



mh