MLB gives Sunday a full 15-game schedule, and the main value in that fact is not just quantity. The official schedule and league API show a card that opens in Tampa Bay, keeps a steady midday run through the East and Central windows and stays alive all the way to San Diego at Seattle late in the evening.
That kind of structure matters more than a simple fixture count. Miami at Tampa Bay gets the day started with Eury Perez against Drew Rasmussen, Philadelphia at Pittsburgh brings Zack Wheeler against Paul Skenes into the early wave, and Boston at Atlanta keeps another useful reference market in the same section of the board. Those are not random names. They are the sort of pitching pairings that shape how the rest of Sunday's prices settle.
The back half of the board still has enough weight to keep the day from flattening out. Dodgers at Angels brings rivalry value into the California window, while Padres at Mariners gives the night a final serious checkpoint before the board closes. For bettors, that means Sunday can be read in phases instead of as one overloaded block of information.
From an editorial view, this is exactly the kind of baseball schedule that deserves space today. It is verified, broad without being chaotic and built around several identifiable start points that help the market breathe from afternoon to night.