CLEVELAND – One batter into Ron Gardenhire's managing career, he already owned a 1-0 lead, and a reason to trust his own instincts. Twelve years and four days later, he still does — and those instincts have placed him in some hallowed company.
Brian Dozier led off Saturday's game with a home run, just as Jacque Jones did in Gardenhire's managerial debut in 2002, and the Twins soaked their fiery leader with beer after rolling to a 7-3 victory over the Indians at Progressive Field that made him the 60th manager in major league history to win 1,000 games.
"So many people [are responsible], you'd love to be able to thank them all," Gardenhire said after a brief but raucous clubhouse celebration. "Now we can move forward and get another 92 this year and be in the playoffs."
OK, that's not what most observers expect out of his team this year, but that's the sort of optimism and determination that have made Gardenhire one of the most successful managers in the game, a popular figure with his players, and a fixture in the Twin Cities for more than two decades. He now also ranks with the likes of Earl Weaver, Tommy Lasorda and his own predecessor and mentor, Tom Kelly, as one of 10 managers whose 1,000 victories were achieved with only one team.
"I've been lucky to see a lot of them, to be a part of those wins, so you take a lot of pride in that as a player," said Joe Mauer, who has never played for any other big-league manager. "To hold that position for all those years, to have all those good teams, it's a tough thing to do. It's definitely a milestone we should celebrate."
And so they did, once Trevor Plouffe recorded the final out by tagging Asdrubal Cabrera near third base. Gardenhire hugged his coaches, two of whom — pitching coach Rick Anderson and first-base coach Scott Ullger — have been on his staff for all 13 seasons, waved to his wife in the stands and to the umpires, and then hugged each player as he walked off the field.
Once in the clubhouse, the players donned T-shirts reading "1000 wins, 67 ejections … and still counting." Assistant general manager Rob Antony presented the manager with a magnum of Dom Perignon from the team. "They could have put a big ol' Bud Light in there and I'd been happy," Gardenhire joked. "But I'll take that."
Oh, he got the beer. Dozier stepped forward to offer a toast on behalf of the players — one that ended with the entire roster pouring their beverages on their skipper's gray-haired head.