Democratic voters gave Sens. Elizabeth Warren and Bernie Sanders and Mayor Pete Buttigieg got the top grades for their performances at Tuesday night’s debate in Ohio.

FiveThirtyEight.com and Ipsos polled a group of 3,360 Democratic primary voters nationwide and had them grade the hopefuls on a four-point scale.

Those voters said Warren earned a 3.2 to top the list, while Sanders tied with the South Bend, Ind., mayor with a 3.1. They were followed by former Vice President Joe Biden (3) and Sen. Amy Klobuchar (2.9).

Rep. Tulsi Gabbard received the lowest marks. Her average was 2.4 points.

In the middle of the pack were Sens. Kamala Harris and Cory Booker, both with 2.8 points. Then came businessman Andrew Yang, with 2.7 points, followed by former Rep. Beto O’Rourke with 2.6 points. Circling the bottom with Gabbard were former HUD Director Julian Castro and billionaire Tom Steyer with 2.5 points.

Pollsters had also asked respondents to rate the favorability of the candidates before Tuesday’s debate in order to determine if a candidate over or under-performed, with the assumption being that better-liked candidates would have an edge.

Warren had the highest pre-debate favorables – and respondents found she also performed the best. Sanders performance, with the second best grade, was in line with his popularity too – as he had the third highest favorability rating.

Buttigieg and Klobuchar out-performed, pollsters said.

Biden had the fourth best overall debate grade – but as the second most popular Democrat after Warren, he actually underperformed, according to FiveThirtyEight.com’s calculations.

“I thought last night was a good night,” Biden told reporters Wednesday at a brief campaign stop in Columbus. His campaign has since been using his debate performance to attract more small donor dollars, as his fundraising efforts in the third quarter were subpar. He only raised $15.7 million, compared to Sanders’ $25.2 million and Warren’s $24.6 million.

Buttigieg outraised Biden too – bringing in $19.1 million in the third quarter.

He raised an additional $1 million in the past 24 hours, senior adviser Lis Smith tweeted Wednesday.

The 37-year-old Indiana mayor also got the biggest increase – 4.5 percent – in Democratic voters who said they’d likely support him after watching his debate performance. Klobuchar, who is in danger of not making the November debate due to polling requirements. got the second biggest bump – earning 3.6 points. Warren came next, adding 2.6 percent to those who’d vote for her.

In fact, only Sanders saw a decrease in the percentage of voters who said they’d support him, but it was nominal at .3 percent.