CLEVELAND - Twins manager Ron Gardenhire caught the tail end of Johan Santana's no-hitter on television Friday night.
"It was pretty cool," Gardenhire said. "I tried to text him, but the son of a gun changed his number. I tried to text him to say, 'Congratulations. Believe it!' "
That was Santana's signature phrase when he pitched for the Twins from 2000 to 2007. He won two Cy Young Awards for Minnesota but the closest he came to a no-hitter was his combined one-hitter with Joe Nathan on July 17, 2004 at Kansas City.
Mets manager Terry Collins took a chance, letting Santana throw 134 pitches in the no-hitter against the Cardinals, especially since the lefthander is coming off major shoulder surgery.
"I was nervous with him being out there with that many pitches because I know Johan," Gardenhire said. "We knew his limits when we had him."
Santana never threw more than 120 pitches for the Twins. Gardenhire's biggest dilemma came Aug. 19, 2007, when Santana racked up 17 strikeouts in the first eight innings against Texas. He was three strikeouts from tying the major league record, but his pitch count was at 112, and pitching coach Rick Anderson wanted to play it safe.
Gardenhire was torn, but Santana simplified things for everybody as he walked toward the dugout, doffing his cap to the crowd.
"I was like, 'Thank you, Jesus! He just took himself out.' We didn't want to run him out there to 125-130 pitches. That's just not Johan. He never responded well to that," Gardenhire said. "His next outing would be down, and it was just a fact, he just wasn't the same. We'd keep him around 100 [pitches], and he was great with it. We knew we were protecting him. But that was a special moment [Friday]."