Welcome to another Major League Baseball Saturday. We've got six day games and seven night games in the books, with the Reds at Cardinals and Twins at Royals postponed. As we do every day, we have all the top stories you need to know, right in this very post. 

Saturday's action

Yankees 12, Orioles 4 (box score)
Mets 5, Nationals 3 (box score)
Blue Jays 4, Rays 1 (box score)
White Sox 6, Tigers 4 in 10 (box score)
Cubs 7, Red Sox 4 (box score)
Indians 4, Mariners 3 (box score)
Pirates 4, Marlins 0 (box score)
Athletics 2, Astros 1 (box score)
Braves 11, Brewers 3 (box score
Rangers 6, Angels 3 (box score)
Rockies 7, Diamondbacks 6 (box score)
Padres 12, Giants 4 (box score)
Dodgers 6, Phillies 5 (box score)
Reds at Cardinals POSTPONED
Twins at Royals POSTPONED

Dodgers win in unlikely fashion

While you were sleeping or out enjoying your Saturday night, the the Dodgers staged an unusual comeback against the Phillies.

Trailing 5-2 entering the ninth inning, the Dodgers hit three consecutive home runs off Hector Neris to tie up the game -- those home runs coming courtesy of Yasiel Puig, Cody Bellinger, and Justin Turner

The Dodgers then put on a pair of baserunners, and won 6-5 when an Adrian Gonzalez batted ball clanked off Maikel Franco's glove:

When it's your night, it's your night. It was the Dodgers' night.

Nova shuts out Marlins

The Pirates' call to re-sign Ivan Nova is looking pretty good right about now.

On Saturday, Nova threw his second career shutout, and his first since joining Pittsburgh (though he had thrown four complete games in 15 tries). He held the Marlins to just three hits, only one of which was for extra bases (a Martin Prado double), and finished the game with 95 pitches as the Pirates won 4-0.

True to character, Nova did not issue a walk. He's walked one batter -- a pitcher, at that -- in his first 36 innings on the season. For those who aren't good with math, that's a quarter of a batter per nine innings.

But it gets even more impressive. Nova walked just three batters in 64 2/3 innings after being traded to the Pirates last year. Add it up, and he's walked only four batters in just over 100 innings in Pittsburgh. Four batters!

The Pirates haven't had a ton of things go their way this year. Nova, however, is an exception.

Triggs rolls on

Entering spring, you probably didn't know much about Andrew Triggs. After all, the extent of his career was limited to 24 appearances for last season's Athletics as a 27-year-old rookie.

Yet Triggs came into Saturday's contest against the Astros with a 2.42 ERA, and exited toting a 1.84 mark thanks to seven shutout innings as the A's beat the Astros 2-1. It's worth noting Triggs has now started five times, and has exited without allowing an earned run four times. That's impressive. So was this: he set a new career-best, striking out nine batters. Triggs had struck out 13 batters over his first 22 innings.

The grounder-dependent Triggs threw 95 pitches on the night -- just 31 of which were fastballs, often clocking in the upper-80s. He pounded the bottom of the strike zone, and was able to coerce the Astros hitters into expanding their zones, either below the knees or off the plate away.

Triggs is unlikely to remain this effective heading forward, but his performance thus far has more than validated the A's decision to claim him off waivers last March.

Gomez hits for cycle

Rangers outfielder Carlos Gomez hit for his second career cycle and the third of the season against the Angels. You can read more about Gomez's night here.

Kemp homers thrice

On Friday night, Matt Kemp knocked in a season-high three runs as the Braves topped the Brewers. On Saturday night, he one-upped himself, homering three times in a boat race.

Kemp's first career three-homer game was odd in one sense: all the long balls came in the fifth inning or later. He hit a two-run shot in the fifth, a solo shot in the seventh, and then another two-run shot in the eighth.  All told, he drove in five runs.

Kemp is now hitting .327/.352/.769 with six home runs and 15 RBI on the season.

Bronx Bombers are MLB's best, Judge makes history

The Orioles built a 9-1 lead against the Yankees on Friday night, but then the Yankees morphed into the ol' Bronx Bombers.

Things continued without a hitch on Saturday, as Brett Gardner led off with a home run and then hit a three-run job in the second. 

Austin Romine contributed a two-RBI single and two-run home run (he had a sac fly before Gardner's three-run shot, too).  Aaron Judge would add a prodigious shot later in the game, which the Yankees won in a laugher, 12-2. 

How about Judge? He was 2 for 2 with the home run, four runs scored, two RBI and two walks, running his season line to .301/.393/.767 with 10 home runs and 20 RBI. Those 10 home runs tie Judge with Jose Abreu (2014) and Trevor Story (2016) for the most April home runs by a rookie in MLB history. Judge actually got jobbed out of a home run against the Cardinals, too (see for yourself here), so he should be the sole owner of the record in a fair world. 

As for this season, Judge trails only Eric Thames and Ryan Zimmerman on the MLB home run leaderboard.

 The Yankees are now 15-7 -- remember, they started 1-4 -- which is good for not only first place in the AL East, but the best record in the American League, and even the top spot in the majors after the Nationals' loss to the Mets went final.

That's right, with one day left in April, the New York Yankees have the best record in baseball. 

The streaking White Sox

The White Sox stayed persistent through a ninth-inning blown save on Saturday, putting up a pair of runs in the 10th -- the first on a clutch Melky Cabrera home run -- to pave the way for their sixth straight victory. The offense has especially been great, scoring six, 12, 10, five, seven and six runs, respectively, during the winning streak. 

Even better, Jose Abreu hasn't had a very good April, but he hit his first two home runs of the season on Saturday. Here was his first: 

The White Sox are now 13-9 and in first place in the AL Central. So they'll head into Sunday with a chance to be in first when the calendar moves to May. Considering the trades of Chris Sale and Adam Eaton in the offseason, that's a very strong start. 

Conforto making his case

Young Mets outfielder Michael Conforto has a ton of talent. He was a starter by the end of 2015, when the Mets won the NL pennant. He struggled last season and the Mets went out and traded for Jay Bruce, so with Curtis Granderson and Yoenis Cespedes (not to mention Juan Lagares) already in house, Conforto has been squeezed out of regular playing time. 

Or at least he had. Through the Mets' first 13 games, Conforto only got 22 plate appearances, only starting three times. Thanks to some injuries, he started his ninth consecutive game on Saturday and, boy, he's making it awfully tough for Terry Collins to leave him out of the lineup when the Mets return to full outfield health. 

Conforto came through with the big blow in the Mets' win on Saturday: 

In all, Conforto was 3 for 4 with two homers and a stolen base on the day. Not bad, eh? He's now hitting .333/.410/.706 with six homers and 12 RBI in just 61 plate appearances this season. Let's hope the Mets keep the 24-year-old in the lineup, regardless of the cost (benching Curtis Granderson?). He's too exciting to be a pinch hitter. 

Wild West action later

Another head-to-head matchup for first place takes place across the country in Arizona at 8:10 p.m. ET and that's the 15-9 Rockies visiting the 15-10 Diamondbacks.

Both teams can rake. The D-Backs rank second in the NL in runs while the Rockies are fifth. The same rankings hold in batting average. The Rockies are third in slugging percentage while the D-Backs are fifth. Arizona is third in OPS while Colorado is fourth. And while it's not exactly Coors Field, Chase Field is a hitter-friendly yard. 

The Diamondbacks have the advantage on the mound, with Zack Greinke (2-2, 2.93) taking the hill against Tyler Anderson (1-3, 7.11). Greinke has only allowed two earned runs in his last two outings with 17 strikeouts and only one walk in 14 innings. 

This is only the second game between the two teams so far this season, with the Rockies having taken the game Friday, 3-1. 

Quick hits