OAKLAND, CALIF. – Brian Dozier likes to apply pressure on pitchers right from the first pitch.
"He puts everyone on high alert when he comes up to hit," Twins hitting coach Tom Brunansky said.
That's because Dozier could swing at that first pitch — and deposit it in the stands.
"Everybody in our dugout is on the top step when he comes up to lead off a game because we don't know what's going to happen," Twins manager Paul Molitor said. "A lot of times, it's something really good."
Dozier, fresh off making his first American League All-Star team in his fourth year, already has hit 20 home runs, only three below his career high set last year. The second baseman has led off a game with a homer five times this season.
The Twins dropped two of three games to Oakland over the weekend, but the game they won came after Dozier belted a leadoff home run off fellow All-Star Sonny Gray. That was Dozier's 11th home run in his past 39 games, a torrid power-hitting pace that likely was the reason he was named an All-Star as an injury replacement (it's actually 12 home runs in 40 games if you want to count his blast in the All-Star Game off Pittsburgh's Mark Melancon).
That stretch also included a pair of walk-off home runs, one on July 6 when he connected for a two-run shot off Baltimore's Tommy Hunter in the 10th inning, the other on July 10 when he hit a three-run homer off Detroit closer Joakim Soria — on the first pitch — to cap a five-run, ninth-inning rally. In a span of five days, Dozier hit the first pitch of the game and the last pitch of the game for home runs.
With 70 games to go, Dozier has a chance to be the first Twins player to hit at least 30 homers in a season since 2012, when Josh Willingham hit 35.