OAKLAND, Calif. – Brian Dozier smacked a high fly ball into the left field stands at O.co Coliseum on Thursday night, tying the score 3-3 and breaking up Jon Lester's shutout.
Or so he thought.
"I guess the wind pushed it pretty good. Even after it landed, I thought it was fair," Dozier said. "I guess not."
Nope. The ball landed perhaps a foot or two foul, the home run didn't count, and the Twins' biggest threat died a few pitches later. Lester retired the first 15 batters he faced, and the final five, too, and recorded his fourth career shutout in the Oakland Athletics' 3-0 victory over the Twins.
"He was painting," Dozier said of the A's new lefthanded ace, who was acquired from Boston at last week's trade deadline. "Painting the corners, especially [with] that cutter. ... In and out with a cutter is pretty tough."
Lester has been tough on the Twins before, but he has probably never been as effective as in the past couple of months, which explains why Oakland dealt away their cleanup hitter, Yoenis Cespedes, to get him July 31. In his past 10 starts, Lester has given up 10 earned runs, going 6-0 with a 1.21 ERA — including a 2-1 victory over the Twins in Fenway Park in June — over that time.
"He was really good," Twins manager Ron Gardenhire said. "He made pitches when he had to and got out of situations."
Well, situation, singular. Only in the sixth inning did the Twins manage to put a runner on second base. Lester was perfect through five innings, and didn't even give up so much as a well-hit ball.