LEADING OFF: Dodgers-Nats in Game 5; Indians set rotation

A look at what's happening all around the majors today:

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MUST-WIN GAME

In the only Division Series to go the distance, Washington hosts the Los Angeles Dodgers in a deciding Game 5 at 8:08 p.m. EDT. The winner heads to Chicago for an NL Championship Series matchup with the Cubs. On the mound for the Nationals will be 20-game winner Max Scherzer. Lefty Rich Hill will start on short rest for the Dodgers, a decision made Thursday afternoon by manager Dave Roberts.

GETTING READY

The wild-card Blue Jays and AL Central champion Indians work out in Cleveland ahead of their AL Championship Series opener Friday night. Corey Kluber is scheduled to start Game 1 for Cleveland, followed by Trevor Bauer in Game 2 and Josh Tomlin in Game 3. Kluber tossed seven shutout innings of three-hit ball against the high-scoring Red Sox in his postseason debut last week. He'll face Blue Jays right-hander Marco Estrada, who yielded one run over 8 1/3 innings to beat Texas in Game 1 of their Division Series.

STORY LINES

No matter which team the Cubs play in the NL Championship Series, there will be some interesting connections. Washington manager Dusty Baker held the same job in Chicago when the Cubs collapsed five outs shy of the 2003 World Series. Not to mention, like the Cubs, the Nationals would be trying to end a long drought -- the last team from the nation's capital to win a pennant was the 1933 Washington Senators.

And if the Cubs wind up facing Los Angeles, there's the relationship between Chicago manager Joe Maddon and Dodgers president of baseball operations Andrew Friedman, his old boss with Tampa Bay.

"They're so balanced," Giants manager Bruce Bochy said after his team was eliminated by the Cubs. "So whoever plays them has their work cut out."

MAKING CHANGES

After finishing at the bottom of the NL West in their sixth straight losing season, the San Diego Padres (68-94) are making changes near the top. Mike Dee is out as team president , though managing partner Peter Seidler offered little insight into the move Wednesday. He denied Dee was fired, but wouldn't say whether Dee resigned or if it was a mutual decision. Seidler said Dee's contract wasn't set to expire until August 2018.