CLEVELAND - Jim Kaat remembers feeling superstitious on Aug. 26, 1962, the day Jack Kralick pitched the first no-hitter in Twins history.
"I was sitting on the top step of the dugout," Kaat said. "I had to go to the bathroom so bad, but I didn't dare leave because he had a perfect game going until the top of the ninth."
Kaat thought back to that afternoon Wednesday after learning that Kralick had died Tuesday at his home in San Blas, Mexico, at age 77.
The two lefthanded pitchers played semi-pro ball together in Michigan, and each made his major league debut with the Washington Senators in 1959 before the team moved to Minnesota two years later.
"We had a lot of good times," Kaat said. "We roomed together for a while. We didn't socialize that much off the field, but we bonded together quite well."
Kralick went 26-26 for the Twins before being traded to Cleveland in 1963 for Jim Perry. Kralick was an All-Star in 1964 and retired after the 1967 season with a 67-65 career record.
His no-hitter remains one of the best pitching performances in Twins history. He retired the first 25 batters for the Kansas City Athletics at Metropolitan Stadium before walking George Alusik with one out in the ninth. Kralick lost his bid for a perfect game but completed the no-hitter in a 1-0 Twins victory.
"He was not a likely candidate to throw a no-hitter," Kaat said. "You'd think more of power pitchers doing that, and he was a guy who threw strikes and had good movement. He just had it going that afternoon."