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After all the years scoring with a paper and pencil, there were some things that turned into habit, and I’m finding there are some things happening using a program to score that are turning into habits too. The trouble with habits is, they can and often do cause trouble, and when you least expect it.

 

This happened to me yesterday. I hope it never happens to you, but if it does, be prepared to swallow a heap-o-humble-pie like I had to.

 

We were in the 4th inning of a game where nothing special was going on. We were the home team, and it was 1-0,us, in the bottom of the 4th. Our leadoff hitter, #4 in the lineup, had just flown out to center on a routine play. #5 worked the count to 3-2 after being up 3-0, and popped the ball to the 1st baseman. I’ve learned not to expect an out, and sure enough, the ball clunked off the glove and the batter was safe. No biggee, ROE3.

 

The next batter was 2-2 after 6 pitches, and the runner got stupid, and got picked. But as luck would have it, the relay from F3 wasn’t in time. No biggee. POSB, R1 moves to 2nd. A K made it 2 down, and a walk make it runners on 1st and 2nd. The next boy was a JV call up the other day, and his granddad was sitting close at hand and we’d been talking off and on during the game. The boy got one on the screws and sent a liner into left center for his 2nd hit of the game, and his 1st Varsity RBI. No biggee, R2 scores, R1 goes to 2nd.

 

Next batter gets hit to load the bases, and its still nothing special going on. Now our leadoff hitter is up. He hits a bouncer that looks like its gonna be trouble from the outset. Of course the runners are moving on contact, but the ball is hit slowly enough that the batter beats it easily for an IF hit. No biggee yet, but then 5 makes a throw to 1st that’s in the dirt, and we have a snowball fight!

 

R3 scores, R2 goes to 3rd, and Ri goes to 2nd. Not really a big deal, but it takes a bit of time to get all the players moved, make sure the runs score, and make sure the right fielder gets the error. I’m talking maybe 15-20 seconds at most, but those few seconds really created a problem.

 

The next batter singles to left center for 2 more runs, and the score is 6-0. R3 scores and R2 scores. Next batter hits a routine ground out and the inning’s over.

 

Our pitcher gets them 1-2-3 on 10 pitches, and here we come again. Our 1st batter hits a popup to 2nd, and yes, it was another brick. ROEF4. The runner steals 2nd before the batter flies out to left. The next batter Ks, and the next is hit. The next batter drops a beauty of a bunt and beats it out to load the bases.

 

Up walks out leadoff hitter, just like the last inning, and I look to see what he’d done in his 1st AB. WHOA! Hold on a minute. The computer says it’s the #9 hitter, but the leadoff hitter is standing there with a bat in his hand. Before I can figger out what the heck’s goin’ on, this kid hits a screamer into RCF that clears the bases, makes the score 9-0, and by the time I move all the players around, the next player has hit a duck fart over the F5’s head and in front of the F7. Of course the runner was moving on contact, and he scores easily and the batter is standing on 2nd with a double. The umpire asks me if that was the 10th run, I say yes, and the game is called.

 

But I’m still looking at the wrong player having gotten the winning hit as far as the computer is concerned, and I haven’t got a clue what the heck happened. The other scorer is Pod and left in a big hurry, so I’m sitting there with my teeth in my mouth wondering if I’ll be able to figger out what happened.

 

I get home and begin looking around, trying to see what the heck happened, but can’t for the life of me see it. So, I called the father of the kid who’d hit the 2 pops that got dropped, and between us we got it down to what happened in those 15-20 seconds. I wasn’t paying attention to what was going on on the field because I was bizzy moving runners, and it turns out the opposing coach IBBd our batter! I didn’t see him go, and the IBB wasn’t announced so I didn’t hear it. So, when I looked up, just in time to see the single drive in the 2 runners, nothing clicked. And when the inning was over on just one pitch to the next batter, it was too late.

 

Well, it took a bit of maneuvering, but I went back and re-entered the whole thing from the IBB on so all the numbers would be correct, but the whole thing took a lot more time than I wanted to spend on it. So now I have to instill a new habit in myself, to not “trust” the computer.

 

I got had by “Garbage in; Garbage out!”

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unfortunately, the computer did exactly what you told it. It didn't miss the IBB, you did.  I know because I have been there and done that.  As I get better with the computer, I worked hard to be a better observer (is it the right batter? etc).  Most times, I missed the subtle pitching change between innings, but missing a batter like that usually comes from chaos and generates more chaos.  As time went on, I recruited a "back-up" who could do the computer on days when I could not be there.  Before long, he sat by my side at the games and became my "spotter" helping me slow down the chaos.  I can't tell you how many times I would finish the previous play and he would get me caught up with the 3 pitches I had just missed.

 

BTW - the Fed rule that you can "announce" an IBB simply makes things worse.  I wish they would make them throw the pitches so I could keep up!

 

Good luck....you don't miss much, so I am sure this drove you crazy!

schwammi,

 

You’re exactly right. The computer had nothing to do with it, and you’re correct about having to become a different if not better observer.

 

I’d love to have a backup, but I’m afraid that would be difficult in our situation, A spotter would be a tremendous aid as well, but I’m afraid that’s pretty much in the weeds as well. What I’ve come to do, is to have a tablet and pencil always at hand to record the game’s goin’s on until I can get things corrected and caught up. It doesn’t happen often that the roof caves in, but it definitely does happen.

 

The good news is, since I wrote the program I use, I also get to make changes to it that make things easier for me to recover when things go wrong. Its just that so many things can go wrong, and when you track as many things as I do, it takes some time to make sure everything’s corrected.

 

Where I made my biggest mistake, was when I designed and tested the program. I did it after the HS season 2 years ago, and worked on it all summer, testing the various things by scoring ML games using DirecTV’s MLB package. Once I got the basic program working, I’d score a game, write down all the things that didn’t work correctly, then get them fixed and score another game.

 

Eventually I got it to where things were pretty clean, and then came fall ball and the real test. Talk about a program farting in your face! I’d completely forgotten about things they do in HS that they don’t do in MLB. Simple things like reentry, courtesy runners were a nightmare to get working correctly. But the worst has been pitchers. I basically watched AL games, and I thought that would work out best because they use the DH just like HS. Unfortunately, very seldom does the pitcher in the AL bat, then move to another fielding position, or move from another fielding position, then bat.

 

Needless to say, the design flaw is all on me. I’m seriously considering making a major change to it after this season to correct that flaw. The main problem has been the way I track pitchers. For hitters its been pretty simple. Every PA is a new record, then when the game’s over I combine them and make game records.

 

But with pitchers I don’t do that. I make one record for each pitcher, and that’s where the problems lie. I’ve been thinking about it though, and I’m pretty sure I can add the new way without disturbing what’s going on now, so it’ll be interesting.

 

Yes, it did drive me crazy! The drive home is about 20 miles, and all that time I was thinking about what could have possibly gone wrong, and of course couldn’t rest until I got it figgered out. But its all great fun, and it’s a heck of a hobby.

I have always enjoyed trading thoughts with you and I think you are onto something about every PA being a separate record.  Just curious, what happens if your coach changes pitchers mid-batter?

 

As you may remember, my experience came from Gamechanger which I liked, but I think lacks many of the stats you track (or maybe they have them but you can't get to them).  I enjoyed toying around with moving from paper to electronic.  And I learned the hard way about operator error, as well as, the prospects of dealing with the elements built into the software that I could not control.  

 

And then there is Fed.....the IBB rule was challenging (GC does not handle it unless the latest release fixed that), the re-entry, the DH, etc.  And when a coach is lax about announcing subs, bedlam starts.

 

I wish you well.  I know you have a ton of pride put into that system.  Good luck!

 

One last question, I noticed that my son's college team tracks every pitch for type, location, and speed (radar gun)....just wondering if you have built that into your system?  Of if you plan to?  Of if there is a way that you could track and merge using two computers?  Now there is a dilemma.   I can only imagine how many statistics and trends you could track with that information (1st pitch FB strike vs non-FB?, speed variance of 1st pitch strike?).  Uh oh....maybe I opened a can of worms?

Originally Posted by schwammi:

I have always enjoyed trading thoughts with you and I think you are onto something about every PA being a separate record.  Just curious, what happens if your coach changes pitchers mid-batter?

 

Have you been watching our games this season?

 

As a matter of fact, the program does fine with the counting of pitches, but because I only create one overall record for the pitcher, it gets “troubled” and counts the AB for the new pitcher. I make a manual adjustment, but only if the batter gets charged to the old pitcher.

 

I had a new one just last week where a pitcher was relieved, then went to play 3rd. After 2 batter and 2 pitches, he was back on the mound. AAAARRRGGGGHHH! Again, I made the manual adjustment, but since I also don’t allow a pitcher to pitch again because it needs to  make a new record, it’s a problem.

 

As you may remember, my experience came from Gamechanger which I liked, but I think lacks many of the stats you track (or maybe they have them but you can't get to them).  I enjoyed toying around with moving from paper to electronic.  And I learned the hard way about operator error, as well as, the prospects of dealing with the elements built into the software that I could not control.  

 

I mess around with Gamechanger too, but it didn’t last too long. I couldn’t get at my own data, and that wasn’t acceptable, plus I’m not willing to lose a lot of the stats I do that it doesn’t do. I stll say for 99% of the people it’s a great app, but its just not for me.

 

And then there is Fed.....the IBB rule was challenging (GC does not handle it unless the latest release fixed that), the re-entry, the DH, etc.  And when a coach is lax about announcing subs, bedlam starts.

 

The subs are killers and always have been. I had an acquaintance sitting beside me a couple games back who was a D1 coach for over 25 years, and he was getting a hoot out of the different things I’ve made the program do that help me kill time. I can right click on a player in either lineup’s number and see all their MaxPrep stats. I can get pitching data for the current game a lot of different ways too, plus get Runner Disruptions.

 

When some changes were made, he couldn’t believe the umpire didn’t announce them other than to the opposing coach, and when I told him that was normal, he said that was the umpire’s job. When I asked him how often the umpires he was used to announced fielding changes other than the pitchers, he admitted it was sometimes a problem at his level too. Its all ok if there’s an extra person “spotting”, but like he mentioned, without having ALL the changes, its almost impossible to get valid fielding numbers.

 

I wish you well.  I know you have a ton of pride put into that system.  Good luck!

Yeah, I’ pretty proud of it because I know how much time I’ve spent trying to make it as user friendly as possible, while producing as many things as possible, and at the same time keeping the integrity of the data as high as possible.

 

One last question, I noticed that my son's college team tracks every pitch for type, location, and speed (radar gun)....just wondering if you have built that into your system?  Of if you plan to?  Of if there is a way that you could track and merge using two computers?  Now there is a dilemma.   I can only imagine how many statistics and trends you could track with that information (1st pitch FB strike vs non-FB?, speed variance of 1st pitch strike?).  Uh oh....maybe I opened a can of worms?

 

No. I don’t now nor have I ever believed in it. I do have a little program that does all that other than the velocity, which I could easily add in, but I refuse to use it. I don’t know how those guys do it, but when I was watching my son’s college team do it, and from what I’ve seen HS teams do, they have a pitcher who isn’t in the game or a coach behind the backstop using the gun, and another writing things down and watching for pitch location and type.

 

To me that’s a very poor way to get a location, and unless they either watch the signals being sent in, or pay super close attention, they very often can’t accurately tell the pitch type. Then there’s the little problem of not really tracking every pitch. In the end its certainly something I COULD do, and it really would be heaven to have all the possible things that could be looked at, but for right now, I’m just a 66 YO guy doin’ this stuff with no help and on a shoestring budget. On top of that, our coach doesn’t have a gun in the program and doesn’t want one, plus under FED rules, players aren’t allowed out of the dugout to do those things, and parents aren’t really interested in anything that means they have to concentrate just as hard on every batter and pitcher as they do for their own kid.

 

 

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