It's not often that a 20-6 victory can be said to have been decided by one play, but the Twins might have managed it Friday night. After taking a 6-1 lead, they were ahead by only a single run in the sixth inning, and Detroit had all the momentum.
An intentional walk to Miguel Cabrera put runners on first and third with one out, when Brian Dozier made what might have been a game-saving play. Ryan Pressly forced Detroit slugger Victor Martinez to hit a grounder toward right field and Dozier ranged far to his left to reach it, then somehow pivoted toward second base, starting a double play that preserved the 6-5 lead.
"I thought with Miguel and [Martinez] running, we had a chance," shortstop Eduardo Escobar said. "It was a big double play."
And everything Escobar and his teammates did afterward was big and bigger. Buoyed by their escape, the Twins embarked on their biggest inning of the season, a nine-run epic sixth inning on only four hits. They added five more runs over the next three innings, one of them on one of the longest home runs in Target Field history by Oswaldo Arcia.
It was the eighth time in franchise history, and first time ever in Target Field, that the Twins had scored 20 runs.
It was also the first time that an American League team had scored 20 runs in a game this season.
Escobar was the catalyst, collecting a career-high five hits, including his fourth home run of the season and a triple to spark the big inning — one that he wanted to stretch into an inside-the-park home run. "Scott [Ullger, the third-base coach] said to stop because there were no outs," Escobar said. "I thought I could make it."
Instead, he finished a double short of the Twins' first cycle in five years. "He has 32 doubles this year," laughed manager Ron Gardenhire, "but couldn't get one tonight."