Whichever side of the issue you come down on, there's certainly an argument to be made for keeping track of how many times a pitcher hurls a ball in anger, especially if you happen to be the coach of a Little League, Babe Ruth, high school, or youth team. Tracking pitch counts down to the balls and strikes can help you gauge a pitcher's effectiveness, whether he's tiring down the stretch or lost command of the strike zone. (Looking up to see the basepaths clogged with runners would also be a helpful indicator.) Developer brings the task of tracking pitcher workloads to the iPhone and iPod touch with , a simple, though largely effective pitch counter.
Baseball Pitch Count lets you track the pitches for up to four pitchers on two teams (presumably the visiting and home squads). The interface is effectively plain. You enter the pitcher's name at the top of the screen and you've got two oversized plus buttons just below the name--one for tabulating balls and the other for pitches in the strike zone. The app also shows the total number of pitches thrown and automatically calculates the percentage of strikes tossed by the pitcher. In a particularly nice touch, Baseball Pitch Count also breaks down how many strikes and balls the pitcher has thrown over the last 10 pitches--a nice indicator of whether the pitcher's control is starting to slip.
While I found myself occasionally sneaking a peak at my iPhone to make sure I was hitting the right button, the oversized plus buttons make it pretty easy to correctly tabulate balls and strikes. Baseball Pitch Count also offers helpful audio cues--tapping the strike button produces a distinctive clicking noise, while the ball button produces a more mournful thunk. If you tap the wrong button, don't despair--the app offers minus buttons to delete erroneously tabulated balls and strikes. In another clever touch, you have to tap the minus button twice--once to delete the pitch, and another time to confirm the move--so that you don't inadvertently cancel out correctly-calculated pitches.
So what to do with these numbers? Baseball Pitch Count lets you send an e-mail that includes the balls, strikes, and total pitches thrown by each pitcher. It's a plain text e-mail, so if you'd like to add those figures to a spreadsheet, you'll have to do that on your own.
In the App Store, the developer promises a number of additional features are in the works, such as tabulating hits, runs, walks, strikeouts, and other pitcher stats. A planned advanced mode will let coaches track the kinds of pitches thrown.