
Baseball Record Board Ideas: Stats High Schools Should Track, Verify, and Digitize
Walk into most high school baseball facilities and the record board—if one exists at all—sits somewhere near the dugout entrance or inside the coach’s office, a painted panel with names and numbers that stopped being updated around the time the last coach retired. The problem is rarely indifference. Baseball programs care deeply about their history. The problem is that updating a physical board requires resources and coordination that busy programs rarely have between February tryouts and May playoffs. A well-designed baseball record board changes the equation: it defines which stats belong on the wall, creates a clear process for confirming those numbers before posting them, and makes updating a record something a coach can do from a phone in the parking lot after a Friday afternoon game.
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Basketball Record Board Ideas: What High Schools Should Track, Verify, and Digitize
Most high school gymnasiums have some version of a basketball record board—a painted panel near the locker room, a set of plaques behind the scorer’s table, or a laminated spreadsheet taped to the trophy case glass. The problem is rarely that schools don’t care about records. The problem is that the board stops getting updated the moment updating it becomes inconvenient. Names fade, seasons blur together, and a record set in 1998 goes unchallenged not because nobody has broken it, but because nobody can remember what the record actually was. A well-designed basketball record board solves that problem before it starts.
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