Baseball Scorecard Templates

Every format you need — 7-inning, 9-inning, youth, pitch trackers

Free printable baseball scorecard templates for every league and age group. All templates use traditional diamond-cell notation, a 9-spot batting order grid, pitcher and catcher logs, inning totals, and an umpire signature box. Print on 8.5 x 11 paper, one scorecard per game.

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Game Day

Scorekeeping and pitch tracking forms for games.

Scorekeeping Cards

Baseball Scorekeeping Card (7-Inning)

Traditional scorecard with diamond symbols for each at-bat. Track baserunning, AB, R, H, RBI plus pitcher and catcher stats.

Baseball Scorekeeping Card (9-Inning)

Full 9-inning scorecard with diamond symbols for each at-bat. Tracks baserunning, stats, pitching, and umpires.

Pitch Tracking

Baseball Pitch Tracker (Youth)

Chart every pitch as a ball or strike for 2 pitchers (50 pitches each). Includes rest day reference chart.

Baseball Pitch Tracker (Full 100)

Track 100 pitches for a single pitcher. 10 rows of 10 numbered pitches with ball/strike and row totals.

Baseball Pitch Tracker (Advanced)

Log pitch type (FB, CB, SL, CH, CT, 2S), ball/strike, and location on a strike zone grid. 25 pitches per page.

Bullpen & Practice

Structured pitch tracking for bullpen sessions and practice.

Baseball Bullpen Session Log

Track pitch type, zone location, velocity, and result for each pitch in a bullpen session. Includes summary by pitch type.

Frequently Asked Questions

How many innings should a baseball scorecard have?
Most youth and rec leagues play 6 or 7 innings — use the 7-inning scorecard. High school, college, and most travel ball is 7 innings. MLB and competitive 18+ play 9 innings. If you pick the 7-inning format, extra-inning boxes handle games that go long.
What size is a printable baseball scorecard?
All our templates are US Letter (8.5 x 11 inches), landscape orientation. Print at 100% scale. The grid fits comfortably on one page with enough white space to write at-bat results and base-running paths.
What stats does a baseball scorecard track?
Per player: at-bats (AB), runs (R), hits (H), and RBI. Per team: runs, hits, errors, and left-on-base by inning. Pitcher log tracks IP, hits allowed, runs, earned runs, walks, strikeouts, hit batters, balks, wild pitches, and total batters faced.
Can I write with pen or do I need pencil?
Pencil is standard. Scorekeeping involves corrections — a batter reaches on an error, you wrote it as a hit, you need to fix it. Pencil lets you do that cleanly. Bring two sharpened pencils and an eraser to every game.
How do I learn to keep score fast enough to keep up with the game?
Start with the basics — K for strikeout, BB for walk, 1B for single, position number for a ground out. You do not have to track every detail on day one. As you get comfortable, layer on fielder numbers (6-3 groundout), trajectory (F7 flyout), and advanced runner notation. Most coaches are competent scorekeepers after 10-15 games.
Do I need a different scorecard for kid pitch vs. coach pitch?
Coach-pitch leagues often skip pitching stats entirely — use a simpler stat sheet instead. For kid pitch, the standard 7-inning scorecard covers everything you need, including pitch count tracking for Little League rules.

Related Coaching Resources

Tired of post-game stat math?

Our premium digital scorekeeper tracks batting averages, pitch counts, and every game stat automatically. The scorecard fills itself in so you can coach the game instead of writing it down.