CHICAGO – Just when you thought Byron Buxton had lost his sense of the dramatic, he went and made baseball history.
Bored with leadoff homers, too impatient to wait for a walkoff, Buxton provided his now-standard home run against the White Sox in the middle of Monday's game. Ho-hum. He's only homered in six straight meetings with Chicago.
But once the White Sox tied the score two innings later and threatened to take the lead, Buxton pulled off something even more breathtaking: He became the second outfielder in Twins history ever to start a triple play. In fact, it was the first center-to-third triple play in major league history, and it was crucial to the Twins' 6-3 victory at Guaranteed Rate Field.
Even if nobody was quite sure what was happening as it unfolded.
"I had no idea what was going on," Twins manager Rocco Baldelli admitted. "When the ball was hit, I was watching the ball. When Buck caught it, I got excited, but thought, we got [one] out. But we got a little more than that."
They did, thanks to some terrible baserunning by Adam Engel and Yoan Moncada — or perhaps they're still unaware of what Buxton can do in the outfield.
"With Buck, you've got to wait until the end. Buck can go, go, go and it's impressive how he plays the outfield," said Gio Urshela, who tagged Moncada for a second out and second base — doubling off Engel — for the third. Then he threw the ball, unnecessarily, to Alex Kirilloff standing on first base. "Just in case," he said with a laugh.
The play was critical because Buxton's two-run homer in the fifth inning represented the Twins' only offense until their decisive four-run outburst in the 10th inning.