MILWAUKEE – Brian Dozier launched a first-inning fastball about 375 feet down the left field line Thursday … and watched it drift foul. He slashed a seventh-inning screamer straight up the middle — but watched the second baseman, shifted far to his right, snag it. He was 0-for-3 by that time, his batting average drooping to .190.
"Whoever came up with the crappy saying, 'They all even out,' that's probably the worst quote in all of baseball," Dozier said afterward. "I felt good at the plate."
He felt even better in the eighth, when the Twins' All-Star second baseman's luck finally changed. He looked for an inside pitch from Brewers lefthander Sam Freeman, pounced on a 95 mph fastball and connected on a 360-foot blast that had no chance to slice toward the foul pole or fall just shy of the fence. His second home run of the year was part of the Twins' best day at the plate this season, and their first road victory of the year, an 8-1 victory at Miller Park.
"It's been a challenging start for him," Twins manager Paul Molitor said of Dozier, whose batting average eclipsed .200 for the first time all season Thursday, albeit at only .203. "He's one of those guys who has a tendency to try to get it back with one swing."
The frustration has even begun to show on Dozier, which is rare. On Wednesday, he sailed a ball 400 feet to the warning track in deep right-center. When it was caught, Dozier yanked off his helmet and gestured. "His frustration was, he is working on trying to use the whole field more, he hits a ball fairly well to right-center, and it's caught," Molitor said.
Ah, but they all even out, right?
"A friend once tell me, they can't catch 'em in the seats," Dozier said. "I'm hope it's behind me now, but to be honest, I could care less as long as we got that W."
There was little chance they wouldn't Thursday, not with the reinvigorated Ricky Nolasco on the mound.