Ervin Santana put manager Paul Molitor in an awkward spot Wednesday.
Molitor checked on the righthander after the sixth inning to make sure he wasn't getting tired. Santana said he was good. Molitor did it again after the seventh and eighth innings, too. Both times, Santana said he was fine.
Molitor is not used to repeatedly asking his starting pitcher such questions. But Santana was at the height of his powers, baffling Oakland hitters with a two-hitter while leading the Twins to a 4-0 matinee victory at Target Field.
Santana's first complete-game shutout for the Twins also is the first shutout thrown by a Twins starter since Andrew Albers on Aug. 12, 2013 against Cleveland — that's 453 games ago. Santana didn't walk a batter while striking out eight.
"I haven't had many decisions in a year and a half of letting a guy go out there to try to get a shutout," Molitor said. "He was dominant. Early on we had trouble scoring runs, but he kept putting the zeros up."
Santana's eighth career shutout required only 100 pitches (66 strikes). He got through two innings on seven pitches, and faced only one batter over the minimum of 27 thanks to a double play in the eighth.
"Everything was working very good," Santana said, "and I was on the same page with [catcher] Juan Centeno the whole game."
Now 3-7 with a 4.06 ERA, Santana could land on the radar of more teams looking for pitching before the Aug. 1 nonwaiver trade deadline. Texas is one team that recently has scouted him.