How it works
You have been away. Games Behind tells you what happened to your team while you were gone, the way a friend who watched every night would tell you over coffee: quickly, in order, and without spoiling the part where you go back and watch the highlights yourself.
Tell it how long you were gone
Slide to the number of days, or pick the date you left. That is the only input. The page finds the window of games you missed and builds the catch-up for exactly that stretch: three days, three weeks, the whole month. Come back tomorrow and it has moved on with you.
It is built from what actually happened
Under the hood, every game your team played in that window is broken down into its facts: who won, by how much, who was hot, who got hurt, who got traded, where they sit in the division now versus where they sat when you left. Those facts are the whole story. The catch-up is written from them and only them.
That is the difference between this and a headline feed. A feed gives you the loudest single thing. Games Behind gives you the arc: the sweep that changed the mood, the rookie who has not stopped hitting, the rival who quietly passed you in the standings. The team you love and the players you follow, picked up right where you set them down.
The audit gate
Here is the part we care about most. The friendly, readable version of your catch-up is written by a language model. Language models are wonderful writers and occasional liars, so we never take one at its word.
Before a single catch-up reaches you, a separate checker reads it back against the box scores it was supposed to be built from, one number at a time. Every score, every date, every name, every games-back figure has to match a real fact in the data. If even one does not, the voiced version is thrown out. You get the plain numbers instead, clearly marked, with nothing invented in them.
We would rather show you a dry, correct catch-up than a lovely, wrong one. One made-up score is one betrayal too many. That check is not a feature we might add later. It is the product.
What is here now
This is a free beta, following the San Francisco Giants through the 2026 season. More teams are coming. It is an independent fan project, not affiliated with Major League Baseball or any club, built entirely from public league data.