KANSAS CITY, Mo. – Nobody has persevered through more ups and downs in his Twins career these past couple of seasons, has endured benchings and demotions and loss of opportunity yet battled back to be a valued contributor, than Eduardo Escobar.
Well, unless it's Tommy Milone.
"He trusts in what he does," manager Paul Molitor said of the lefthander. "He hasn't been that way the whole year."
No, but that pair of baseball Rodney Dangerfields has escaped the minor leagues, has forced Molitor to put them on the field, and on Monday they combined to carry the Twins past the runaway Royals. Escobar provided the runs, Milone handled run prevention, and the Twins held their ground in the wild-card chase by handing the reigning AL champions a 6-2 loss at packed Kauffman Stadium.
Escobar, who for two straight seasons has stepped in as the Twins starting shortstop when the incumbent faltered, went 3-for-3 with a double, knocked in three runs and scored another, raising his batting average to .458 (11-for-24) in September. But it was his walk that impressed Molitor most, a sign that Escobar is learning better on-base skills.
"One thing he's improved upon as of late is his patience, trying to keep the ball in the zone a little bit better," Molitor said. "When you're pressing, trying to find your way in the lineup a little more frequently, you get a little overaggressive at times."
Making pitchers throw more strikes, though, results in better pitches to hit.
Escobar got one from Kansas City starter Yordano Ventura in the sixth, and he used it to break a 1-1 tie with a sharp single that scored Torii Hunter. Then, with the Twins needing insurance runs in the seventh, he waited out four breaking pitches from reliever Joba Chamberlain, finally getting a fastball and popping a floater down the left-field line that speedy outfielder Paulo Orlando couldn't reach despite a sliding effort. That hit scored Trevor Plouffe and Hunter and improved Escobar's batting average when playing shortstop — as opposed to his occasional ventures to third base or left field — to .331.