Ah yes, the classic 3-6-3-6 'double play'!

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A 3-6 putout in a baseball game is nothing out of the ordinary. You have a runner at first base, there's a ground ball to the first baseman, he goes to second to get the lead runner -- you know the drill.

But what about two 3-6 putouts ... on the same play?

That's what transpired in the bottom of the third inning of Monday's game between the White Sox and Twins at Target Field. With one out and a runner on first, Kody Clemens chopped a ground ball to Jacob Gonzalez at first base. Gonzalez threw to shortstop Colson Montgomery covering second to get the lead runner, but the return throw for an attempt at completing a double play was high and went over Gonzalez's head.

Gonzalez chased the ball down, turned and fired toward second again -- this time, Clemens was trying to take the extra base. The throw ended up being a two-hopper, but it was right on the money and Montgomery applied the tag to get Clemens.

Technically, it won't go down in the record books as a double play because the batter reached base; instead it's the less-heralded and more general "two-out play." Nevertheless: two 3-6 putouts on the same play.

That's one you don't enter in your scorebook every day.

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