Washington 8, Miami 3
One of the cliches in baseball is that the ball will find you right away on defense.
Baltimore 4, Seattle 0
Dylan Bundy befuddled Seattle throughout Tuesday night's game. The Baltimore Orioles starter used all of his pitches, changed speeds, and the Mariners could manage nothing more than one bunt single early in the game.
Boston 3, Toronto 0
No one has done it more quickly than Chris Sale.
Cincinnati 14, NY Mets 4
Scott Schebler played for more than a month with a left shoulder strain, not realizing to what extent it was affecting his hitting.
Texas 12, Houston 2
Playing 780 miles from home, where extensive flooding from Hurricane Harvey put much of Houston underwater, the Houston Astros lost 12-2 to the Texas Rangers on Tuesday night to open a three-game series at Tropicana Field.
St. Louis 10, Milwaukee 2
Luke Weaver delivered one of the best performances of his young career the last time he stepped foot in Miller Park, striking out a then-career-high eight batters, so it stood to reason that the Brewers would adjust when the young St. Louis right-hander took the mound against them less than a month later.
Chi. Cubs 4, Pittsburgh 1
Jake Arrieta admitted he didn't pitch his best on Tuesday, but he still had more than enough to make do.
Minnesota 6, Chi. White Sox 4
Minnesota Twins shortstop Jorge Polanco doesn't have a good explanation for why he hits so well against the White Sox. Tuesday was just another example, though, that Polanco has thrived when facing Chicago's pitchers.
Kansas City 6, Tampa Bay 2
After 45 consecutive scoreless innings, the Kansas City Royals erupted in a big way.
Colorado 7, Detroit 3
Payback for Nolan Arenado came quickly.
Arizona 7, LA Dodgers 6
Paul Goldschmidt made franchise history on Friday night and Zack Greinke moved to the top of the 2017 charts. It was a good night for Arizona's G-men.
Arizona 7, LA Dodgers 6
Fernando Rodney's sixth save in eight games might have been his most satisfying.
LA Angels 8, Oakland 2
San Diego 6, San Francisco 3
There were a number of times this season when 24-year-old San Diego Padres right-hander Luis Perdomo didn't react well to adversity.