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In baseball scoring, why is a strikeout marked with a K?

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In baseball scoring, why is a strikeout marked with a K?

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Dear Straight Dope: Why do they score a strikeout in baseball a with a K? — Blvdbydflt Makes you wonder, doesn’t it? But there’s actually a simple explanation. 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.” S

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