Alright, let me walk you through how I dug into the player stats for that Yankees versus Giants game recently. I watched parts of the game, and afterwards, I really wanted to see the individual numbers, you know? See who really pulled their weight and who didn’t.

So, the first thing I did, pretty standard stuff, I just went to my go-to sports news site on my phone. Found the game summary easy enough. It gave me the final score, hits, errors, the usual overview. But that wasn’t quite scratching the itch. I wanted the nitty-gritty on each player.
Getting Down to Details
My next step was firing up my laptop. I figured I needed a more detailed source than just a news headline. I thought about where to go. Sometimes those big sports portals are okay, but other times they bury the stats under tons of other stuff. I decided to try the official MLB site first, they usually have solid Gameday recaps or detailed box scores.
Took a little clicking around, navigating through their schedule or scores section. Found the specific Yankees-Giants matchup. There was usually a link like ‘Box Score’ or ‘Game Recap’. I clicked into the box score.
Bingo. That’s where the good stuff was.
- It laid out all the batters for both teams.
- Showed their at-bats, runs, hits, RBIs, walks, strikeouts. All the key hitting stats.
- Then it had the pitching breakdown. Who pitched, how many innings, hits allowed, runs, earned runs, walks, strikeouts.
Just Looking Through
I didn’t need to like, download anything or make a fancy spreadsheet this time. I mostly just scrolled through it right there on the page. I was curious about a couple of specific players, wanted to see their exact lines for the game. It was all there. You could see who had a multi-hit game, or which pitcher got knocked around a bit.
It’s always interesting to compare the box score stats to what you thought you saw just watching the game. Sometimes the numbers tell a slightly different story, or confirm exactly what you suspected.
So yeah, that was pretty much my process. Started broad with the game result, then drilled down using the official site to get the player-by-player breakdown. Took maybe 5-10 minutes total once I got to the right place. Got the details I wanted. Simple as that, really.