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Old Tue Jul 11, 2006, 08:53am
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Trivia Time

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Q: Why, in baseball, is a strikeout annotated with a "K?"









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Old Tue Jul 11, 2006, 09:31am
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Way back in the dark ages of baseball, when a batter struck out, it was said that he had "struck." Letters were used for scoring then just as they are now, but the letter "S" was already being used for sacrifice, so they assigned "K," the last letter of the word struck, to stand for "a player who missed the ball in three swings."
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Old Tue Jul 11, 2006, 12:37pm
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The way I understood it was that the letter K has three lines for strike 1, 2 and 3
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Old Tue Jul 11, 2006, 01:14pm
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From Neil Cohen's article "How to Score a Game," from John Thorn and Pete Palmer's Total Baseball, we discover that Henry Chadwick, one of the first newspaper journalists to take a literary interest in baseball, built upon a scoring technique devised by fellow New York journalist M. J. Kelly. "Chadwick created a minutely detailed scorecard so he would have a point of reference and recollection when he wrote his articles about the game," Cohen writes. He adds that Chadwick invented the modern boxscore.

Chadwick also invented the system we use to indicate fielders (pitcher=1, shortstop=6, right field=9, etc.), and the abbreviations we use for events (HR, HBP, BB, so on). Chadwick needed S for sacrifice, so he chose K for strikeout - K being the last letter of "struck," which was then in more common use than the term "strikeout."

Some people carry it further, using a K for a swinging strikeout, and a backward K for being caught looking. Some folks go with the more intuitive "SO," but this creates confusion with the abbreviation for "shutout," so "K" has remained the abbreviation of choice.
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Old Tue Jul 11, 2006, 11:29pm
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Quote:
Originally Posted by Gaff
Some people carry it further, using a K for a swinging strikeout, and a backward K for being caught looking. Some folks go with the more intuitive "SO," but this creates confusion with the abbreviation for "shutout," so "K" has remained the abbreviation of choice.
In my coaching days a backwards K was a strikeout looking and a very bad thing to have in the scorebook. And while I was not normally keeping the book, I always knew of backwards K's in the book. A player with a backwards K was on thin ice. A player with 2 backwards K's in the same game would not get a chance to get a third, and they all knew this.
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