What Is Baseball Keeper?
Baseball Keeper is a personal baseball history tool. It's a straightforward way to track the MLB games you've been to, so you don't have to rely on memory, photos, or faded ticket stubs later.
We have a database of all regular season and postseason MLB games from 1925-2025, powered by historical game data from Retrosheet, ensuring accuracy across every season.
Search for a game, mark it as attended, and see game-level statistics from all of your attended games. It's as simple as that.
Who Baseball Keeper Is For
Baseball Keeper is for people who want to preserve their baseball memories in a more intentional way. If you care about documenting the games you've actually attended, this is a simple, orderly way to do it.
It's for people who:
- Keep a ranked list of the ballparks they've been to.
- Want to remember every game, whether it was in the national spotlight or a frigid late-April pitching duel.
- Have a growing collection of old ticket stubs and scorecards.
- Remember the date of the first game they ever attended.
If any of that sounds familiar, Baseball Keeper was built for you.
How it Works
First, sign up for an account. Once you do, we'll email you a link to sign in directly. There are no passwords to create or remember, which helps keep things simple and secure.
After logging in, head to the Find a Game page. You can search by year, home team, away team, or exact date. When you find the game you attended, click "Mark."
Any games you mark will automatically appear in My Dashboard. This is where everything comes together. My Dashboard shows a complete record of the games you've attended, along with a set of game-level stats derived from them. That includes things like the team you've seen most often, how many different ballparks you've been to, and how your attendance spans across seasons.
You can also export your full game history as a spreadsheet at any time.

How It Compares to Spreadsheets & Notes
I've had several iterations of "trackers" over the years, all eventually lost or abandoned and replaced by the next version. It's hard to stay consistent. I've bookmarked news articles from games, relied on mental snapshots, and kept partial lists in different places.
Over time, it's the fragmentation that leads to lost memories. One spreadsheet here, another there, notes saved on different devices. Nothing ever feels complete or fully up to date.
A spreadsheet can work for logging dates and opponents, but that's usually where it ends. It doesn't surface patterns, it doesn't provide much context, and it doesn't grow with you as your history grows.
Baseball Keeper was built specifically for this use case. Instead of static rows, it gives you a structured and searchable record of the games you've attended, along with a My Stats area that highlights things you might not think to track on your own, like the teams you've seen most often, how many different ballparks you've been to, or how your attendance has changed over time.
It's the difference between keeping a list and having a living record of your baseball history that you can access anywhere.
Is Baseball Keeper Free?
Yes! That includes...
- Searching our database.
- Searching your database of attended games and seeing your personal game stats.
- The ability to export your games as a .csv file.
Why I Built This
I built Baseball Keeper because I wanted a better way to track the games I've been to.
I've always enjoyed going to baseball games. It's one of my favorite hobbies, and nothing beats sitting in the bleachers with a hot dog and a beer on a Friday afternoon. Some games are notable to the league as a whole. Others are only notable to me.
I grew up a White Sox fan, and I eventually stopped hating the Cubs in 2013. Most of my early games were on the South Side, but over time I found myself at Wrigley more than anywhere else. At this point, I've been there 54 times.
Over the years, I tried to piece my history together using ticket stubs, photos, and whatever else I had saved. I've personally been to 108 games spanning the last 30 years. Remembering the big games was easy, but what surprised me was how many small details came back once everything was in one place. Who I was with. The weather that day. The random player I forgot I'd ever seen in person.
Seeing the stats was the other part I didn't expect. Once my games were compiled, My Dashboard started surfacing things I'd never thought to track on my own.
A lot of work has gone into getting this site up and running, and I'm excited to keep improving it based on how people actually use it. It's meant to be a companion tool for fans whose best days are spent in the bleachers and who want a better way to preserve those memories.
Search any MLB game from 1925-2025 and mark the ones you attended.