On Opening Day at Target Field, let's say Byron Buxton hits a hot smash to Cardinals third baseman Matt Carpenter, whose throw pulls Paul Goldschmidt off first base just as Buxton arrives. Hit or error?
Don't bother turning to the press box for the answer. The decision is being made in a basement 10 miles away, in the Roseville office of Twins official scorer Stew Thornley.
In an effort to expose as few people as possible to coronavirus risk, Major League Baseball last month informed its scorebookkeepers that they will work remotely, watching each game via a live computer feed rather than from the press box.
"We all know it's much better to be there," said Thornley, one of three Minnesotans employed by MLB to compile a statistical record of each Twins home game. "But we all understand the circumstances, and their regard for our safety and the safety of others."
In order to give scorers the best possible look at each play, MLB "has given us more and better tools to do our jobs," said Thornley, who has scored Twins games since 2007.
Those tools include a special proprietary live feed for scorers, a full-field camera angle to allow them to watch replays of baserunners and fielders simultaneously, and a Slack channel to communicate with MLB employees.
"It's really a team effort, with the DataCast operator, the [ball-and-strike] operator, and the field timing coordinator," Thornley said. His wife, Brenda Himrich, is a timing coordinator at Target Field, keeping countdown clocks between innings and during pitching changes, and will be stationed in the press box while he's at home.
Thornley, who shares duties with Gregg Wong and Kyle Traynor, is on a four-member MLB advisory committee that oversees scoring operations, so he's been involved in much of the planning for remote work. It's going to be strange, he said, "but we're all professionals." He'll have a big-screen with the live feed, computer screens with the boxscore and FSN's 12-second-delayed broadcast (muted, so as not to influence his decisions), and access to whatever replays he needs — to confirm his judgments, not to make them.