When Eduardo Escobar touches the ball, it's expected to be a double. Even the official scorers are buying into it.
Escobar socked a 98 mile-per-hour Joe Kelly fastball to left-center in the eighth inning Tuesday night. Red Sox outfielder Jackie Bradley Jr. misplayed the ball, and it rolled to the wall.
Two runs scored as Escobar sprinted to third. He was initially given a single, with a two-base error charged to Bradley. About an hour later, the play was revised to give Escobar a double and a mere one-base error on Bradley.
Regardless, the Twins scored four runs in the eighth — two runs on Escobar's amended double and two more on a triple by Robbie Grossman — and pulled away to a 6-2 victory over a Boston team that was trying to become the first in the majors to win 50 games this season.
Escobar has a major league-leading 32 doubles this season and is on pace to hit a record 75. He has gotten so good at it that he is earning doubles while taking a postgame shower.
"It's automatic," said Twins reliever Trevor Hildenberger, who got two big outs in the seventh inning to strand two Boston runners on base. "If he doesn't have a double a day, it's like a disappointment."
The Daily Doubler gave the Twins a lead with each of his hits, the first one a two-run double in the sixth that put them ahead 2-1. Each time, he got up, pounded his hands together, punched the air and yelled toward his dugout.
"It's the energy," Escobar said. "There's a lot of people here. You're facing that team. It's very exciting, especially when you are facing good pitching."