"It's not necessarily easy to go out there and score runs and score runs in bunches, like you were able to do tonight," leadoff man Curtis Granderson said. "When you do it, you're obviously grateful for it and hopefully you can feed off of it."
Revenge, as they say, is best served with a 110.7-mph upper deck blast off the bat of Yoenis Cespedes.
Well, OK, they don't really say that.
What they do say is that momentum in baseball is the next day's starting pitcher. And so, no matter how much promise we've seen out of the left arm of Steven Matz and no matter how unflattering the personal postseason history of Clayton Kershaw, who will be operating on three days' rest, may be, the easy assumption is that the Dodgers will feel fairly comfortable with their ability to swing the momentum -- and this series -- back in their favor with Kershaw in Game 4 and Zack Greinke in Game 5.