Eddie Guardado was a short, husky lefthander and first received a shot with the Twins as a starter. He made his 25th and last career start on June 12, 1995.
Guardado made 604 relief appearances for the Twins between then and the end of 2003. He led the American League with 83 appearances in 1996, and received the label "Everyday Eddie."
Eduardo Escobar and pitcher Pedro Hernandez were traded by the White Sox to the Twins for pitcher Francisco Liriano on July 28, 2012. Escobar was a switch hitter and the Twins advertised him as having a future as a utility infielder.
Five years later, the Twins have returned to the postseason, and one of the improbable reasons for this is Escobar surfacing as a short, husky regular at third base, a genuine second coming of "Everyday Eddie."
Miguel Sano fouled a ball off his left shin on Aug. 18 and hobbled through a game the next day. At that point, the Twins had played 121 games, and Escobar had started 73, including 37 at third base.
Sano was diagnosed with a stress reaction and did not return to the active list until Friday night at Target Field. It took a 37-game push without Sano from Aug. 20 to Wednesday night for the Twins to gain the American League's second wild card.
Escobar started all 37 — 35 at third base and two as the designated hitter. He had nine home runs and 20 RBI in that time. He added a home run and three RBI Friday, putting his season totals to 21 and 73.
"Esco and what he's done, being a part-time player and then getting inserted on an everyday basis … giving us production and defense," manager Paul Molitor said. "You can make a lot of cases for your most valuable guy, but for him stepping up the way he has the last part of the season has been huge for us."