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Introducing: Player Stats

Track player performance from every game you’ve attended, built from official box score data

How-toJun 15, 20262 min read

Introducing: Player Stats

We’re excited to announce the addition of player statistics to Baseball Keeper. For every game you’ve attended, you can now see individual totals for home runs, hits, RBIs, doubles, triples, and strikeouts (by batters). This was the number one request from early users, and we’re thrilled to roll it out.

How it works

When you mark a game as attended, we pull the official box score and add that game’s stats to your personal totals. Head over to the Player Stats page and you’ll see everything aggregated in one place.

A screenshot of the Player Stats page on Baseball Keeper.

The top row gives you a quick snapshot of your totals. Below that, you’ll find a running list of every player who has recorded the selected stat in a game you’ve attended, along with their totals across those games. You can also export your stats to a CSV file.

What This Looks Like in Practice

For example, in the 113 games I’ve attended, I’ve seen:

  • 272 home runs by 191 players
  • 1,945 hits by 680 players
  • 1,023 RBIs by 415 players
  • 1,887 strikeouts by 716 players
  • 343 doubles by 237 players
  • 42 triples by 38 players

Like our official game records, player stats are powered by Retrosheet. Accuracy and trust are our top priorities. Your stats are built from official game data.

Beta + Performance

Player Stats is currently in beta. We’ve spent countless hours building and testing to make sure the numbers are correct and stable. Over the next few months, we’ll continue improving performance.

If you have a large number of games marked (150+), you may notice a delay when visiting the Player Stats page shortly after marking or unmarking a game. This is intentional. Stats are recalculated in the background to ensure they are always fully accurate, not partially updated or inconsistent.

The original iteration of Baseball Keeper was an attendance companion. A way to retain the memories you’ve built at games. This is taking it one step further – a natural evolution of what Baseball Keeper has to offer. We will continue to scale the site in conjunction with user feedback, so if you’ve got any (good, bad, suggestions, etc), please reach out to us at info@baseballkeeper.com or via social media on X and Instagram

Ready to log your first game?

Search any MLB game from 1925-2025 and mark the ones you attended.