Peterson Scoremaster Baseball/Softball Scorebook


  • Scoring book – ideal for baseball or softball
  • Scores 25 games
  • 11 batting positions per sheet
  • Also includes simplified scoring instructions and durable wire binding
  • Enables complete summary of individual batting records and pitching performances

Product Description
The Peterson Baseball/Softball Scoremaster Scorebook includes everything you need to for a complete summary of individual batting records and pitching performance! Each book scores 25 games with 11 batting positions per sheet. The Peterson Scoremaster also includes simplified scoring instructions and durable wire binding. This scoring aid is ideal for veteran and rookie coaches…. More >>

Peterson Scoremaster Baseball/Softball Scorebook

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  1. #1 by K. Stratton on April 14, 2010 - 4:56 am

    This is the best scorecard book we have found to use for baseball games and is the ONLY one my husband will use. Our original local supplier went out of business and we were thrilled that we found the same product, for a reasonable price, here on Amazon. If you have a basball fanatic in your household, as I do, this is a great way to allow them to keep stats & info on multiple games in a single scorebook. I highly recommend this scorecard book for the baseball fan in your life!
    Rating: 5 / 5

  2. #2 by E. M. on April 14, 2010 - 6:12 am

    Oh Yay – now I can see all my games at once, and don’t have to remember “when was it Mariano gave up two homers in a row?” No more individual papers hanging out, no more fuzzy copies. A bound pad for scoring games, and sent without shipping charges. Oh Yay~ Peterson Scoremaster Baseball/Softball Scorebook
    Rating: 5 / 5

  3. #3 by Jim R. Holbrook on April 14, 2010 - 6:48 am

    As the title says, this book is not suitable for my method of scoring. HOWEVER (And this is a huge however), individual preferences for scoring a baseball game is as varied an art as they come. If you have 2,000 fans at a minor league game keeping score, you’ll likely have 2,000 different methods. Theres a certain beauty in that. 3 starts fit perfectly.

    As for this score book, I used it for a season of Little league games because I had seen it in use at other games and in sporting goods stores for years I thought I would give it a try. For no specific reason, I just didn’t care for it. That’s not to say that others will use nothing but Petersons.

    So, try, if you like great, if you don’t, move on. Better yet, create your own score sheets to fit your needs. But, those of us who use scorebooks can agree on one thing: scoring adds demesion, depth and a level of enjoyment that a lot of fans probably don’t appreciate.
    Rating: 3 / 5

  4. #4 by C. Tavares on April 14, 2010 - 8:24 am

    This is by far the best scorebook for baseball. I have tried others over the years and this is the best. Sure if your in a league that has more than 9 batters ( not true baseball) or leagues that ar emore flexible than this is not the book for you, however this book if completed properly can give you an exact recount of the game as it unfolds. It does also have 12 inning, while most other books offer only 10 or 9 innings. This can tend to be a problem if you bat around the order more than 1 time. You would then have to go to a different page and that is a huge pain.

    Rating: 5 / 5

  5. #5 by K. Alesse on April 14, 2010 - 10:05 am

    There aren’t many things I would change. I use this for MLB games I attend, as well as for farm teams and when I’m on international trips to watch the local teams.

    It has, and I like:

    12 innings; ball/strike count [boxes]; Space for notes (I put in attendance, weather, people that went to the game with me, etc); space for the time of the game; umpires; and more.

    Unlike a previous reviewer, this is NOT merely a blank piece of paper. While it may not be good for T-ball, this is great because it has the outline of the ball-diamond with player locations (for those that like to draw where the ball was hit) as well as the norm “BB, HP, SAC, 1B, 2B, etc” printed notations within each box. This gives amble flexibility for scoring (when I run off to the bathroom and my father scores, it affords him the ability to score how he likes, as well as how I like).

    Wish it had a “pitch count” portion at the end of each inning — but really this fits in so much already, I’m not sure how it would fit. I just put the pitch count near the top of the scorecard (near the inning #) and it’s worked just fine for me.

    [If you're scoring T-Ball with 3-4 players for each slot, I'd suggest just making your own template beacuse you may be hard-pressed to find a suitable scorecard. This is the best, and the only one I'd buy.]
    Rating: 5 / 5

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