Brian Dozier doesn't like talking about being a power hitter, but he spoke up Saturday about the state of the team.
"We had a lot of close ballgames," he said. "But if you asked this question last year it would be completely different. We are winning these games. It's a whole different squad, and good teams win close games."
The Twins held off Seattle 4-3 at Target Field, offering the latest example that they aren't the wreck they were last season. Samuel Deduno pitched six strong innings, Dozier hit his 11th homer, a three-run blast in the fifth. And Glen Perkins came on for the third consecutive game to earn the save and take over the American League lead. The Twins have won three in a row and five of their past six.
Michael Saunders brought Seattle within 4-3 with a home run in the eighth off Jared Burton, but the Twins held the score right there. They are getting good at this. In their past 12 games, the Twins are 6-1 in one-run decisions.
"Some pretty exciting baseball," Twins manager Ron Gardenhire said.
For their efforts, the Twins improved to 21-20. This is the latest they have been over .500 since the end of the 2010 season, when they went 94-68.
"Everything is going good," Dozier said. "We are clicking on all cylinders."
Dozier led off the first with a single to left and eventually scored on Kurt Suzuki's double — he was the cleanup hitter Saturday — to put the Twins ahead 1-0.