USA TODAY US Edition

10 must-see MLB games we’re circling

- Steve Gardner

Now that the official 60-game MLB schedule has been released, it’s time to start planning out our viewing schedules to make sure we catch the best games.

There are so many subplots just waiting to be revealed as the new season gets underway, but here are the dates we have circled in red on our baseballwa­tching calendar:

1. New York Yankees at Washington Nationals (July 23): The official season opener couldn’t be any better. The Yankees get to show off their $324 million ace Gerrit Cole against three-time Cy Young Award winner Max Scherzer and the defending World Series champions. 2. Los Angeles Dodgers at Houston

Astros (July 28-29). There will be more trash cans than fans in Minute Maid Park for the long-awaited World Series rematch from 2017. Will the Dodgers feel they have some unfinished business to settle after the Astros’ sign-stealing scandal might have cost them a ring?

2a. Houston Astros at Los Angeles Dodgers (Sept. 12-13). Imagine if fans are allowed to return to the ballpark by the time the two teams meet again at Dodger Stadium? The boos – even at 20% capacity – could be deafening. 3. Milwaukee Brewers at St. Louis

Cardinals (Sept. 24-27). This seasonendi­ng four-game series pits two division rivals against each other with plenty of playoff implicatio­ns on the line. Last season, the Cards won the NL Central, finishing two games ahead of the wild-card Brewers. Another division title could hang in the balance on the season’s final weekend.

4. Houston Astros at Oakland Athletics (Aug. 7-9). Not only is this a clash of AL West powerhouse­s who were both playoff teams a year ago, it’s also their first meeting of the season ... and it’s possible the A’s will have right-hander Mike Fiers starting one of the three games. Fiers, you might remember, was the first person to go on the record about the Astros’ sign-stealing operation in 2017. How will the Astros react? 5. St. Louis Cardinals vs. Chicago

White Sox at Dyersville, Iowa

(Aug. 13). The “Field of Dreams” game will be played at the park where the iconic baseball movie was filmed. Because of the new schedule’s East vs. East, Central vs. Central, West vs. West setup, the Yankees had to be replaced by the Cardinals. But it’s still a classic matchup. And we can’t wait to see home runs disappear into the cornfield. 6. New York Mets at Washington Nationals (Sept. 24-27). The shortened season should keep any team from running away with a division title, especially one as competitiv­e as the NL East figures to be. Even if one of these teams is eliminated, the chance to play spoiler is

still plenty of incentive.

7. Colorado Rockies at Texas Rangers (July 24). The first official game at Globe Life Field, MLB’s one and only new ballpark in 2020. The exterior might have drawn comparison­s to a barbecue grill, but at least it’s air conditione­d inside! 8. San Francisco Giants at Los Angeles Dodgers (July 23). Mookie Betts makes his debut in Dodgers’ blue in the second half of MLB’s season-opening doublehead­er. 9. New York Yankees at Boston Red Sox (Sept. 18-20). Due to the shortened season, these traditiona­l rivals only play each other 10 times instead of 19. So every

game means even more! This weekend series marks the teams’ final regular-season meeting, so expect plenty of fireworks. (You could also say the same thing about the St. Louis Cardinals-Chicago Cubs matchup at Wrigley Field Sept. 4-7.) 10. Labor Day marathon! (Sept. 7).

Although we probably won’t have fans skipping work or school to catch matinee games at the ballpark, a holiday full of baseball on television will still be great. The action starts with MarlinsBra­ves and Phillies-Mets at 1:10 p.m. ET and doesn’t stop until the West Coast night games conclude in Oakland, San Francisco and San Diego.

 ?? GARY A. VASQUEZ/USA TODAY SPORTS ?? The Astros celebrate while the Dodgers leave the field after Game 7 of the 2017 World Series.
GARY A. VASQUEZ/USA TODAY SPORTS The Astros celebrate while the Dodgers leave the field after Game 7 of the 2017 World Series.

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