Brian Dozier received the first curtain call of his baseball career Saturday. He froze in the dugout, briefly, until Twins manager Paul Molitor told him to get out there and wave to the crowd.
"I was kind of late to it because I didn't know what to do," Dozier said.
Seems ironic because three months ago, Dozier looked similarly lost in the batter's box, to the degree that people wondered if it was nearing curtain time on his tenure in a Twins uniform.
Dozier's polar turnaround counts as one positive from this dreadful season. He ranks among the best hitters in Major League Baseball since June after finally committing to changes that have put him on track for career highs in just about every offensive category despite his abysmal start.
Dozier's season actually feels like two distinct segments: Two months of failure, 2 ½ months of sizzle.
He has smacked a league-best 19 home runs since June 19, hit safely in 22 of 23 games and has raised his batting average nearly 70 points since late May.
The simplest explanation is that he matured as a hitter.
Dozier admits that he became sidetracked in his approach. Specifically, he tried to hit home runs every at-bat and began pressing as his team's season went into a death spiral.