Each inning cell records runs for the away or home team, while the totals column keeps runs, hits, and errors visible. Selecting an inning focuses the scoring controls on that column, so you can correct a specific frame without rebuilding the whole scoreboard.
Choose preset 9, 7, or 6 inning formats, or set a custom regulation length with extra innings. The out counter shows the current top or bottom half, and reaching three outs prompts you to switch half innings instead of changing the state automatically.
Scoreboard state, event history, and saved games are stored in this device's browser, with a saved game limit to avoid uncontrolled storage growth. Share links encode only the current scoreboard in the URL, without server sync. Fullscreen, box score copy, and game report copy are presentation aids; this tool is not an official stat feed or umpire system.
Common questions and answers about this topic.
Click the inning cell you want to edit, then use the "Add run" or "Remove run" buttons on the away or home team panel. You can also use the Previous / Next inning buttons to move between columns.
Standard (9 innings) matches professional baseball such as MLB and most adult leagues. Shortened (7 innings) fits college, softball, and some amateur rules. Youth (6 innings) is used for junior leagues. Pick Custom to set any number of regulation innings up to 15.
Everything is saved in your browser's local storage on this device only. The share button creates a URL that encodes the current scoreboard, but the tool itself does not upload scores, team names, or event history to a server.
Use the "Add extra inning" button in the game settings card to append one extra inning at a time (up to 12). A new column appears in the scoreboard and is automatically selected so you can start recording. "Remove extra inning" reverses it if you add one by mistake.
Yes. The scoreboard adapts to small screens with horizontal scrolling for the inning columns, and the "Enter fullscreen" button puts the scoreboard on the full display—useful for projectors, classroom displays, or broadcasting the score during a community game.