<?xml version="1.0" encoding="ISO-8859-1"?>
<BODY.CONTENT>
<UID>
8601230747
</UID>
<PUBLICATION>
DETROIT FREE PRESS
</PUBLICATION>
<DATE>
860525
</DATE>
<TDATE>
Sunday, May 25, 1986
</TDATE>
<EDITION>
METRO FINAL
</EDITION>
<SECTION>
SPT
</SECTION>
<PAGE>
1H
</PAGE>
<ILLUSTRATION>
Photo
</ILLUSTRATION>
<CAPTION>

</CAPTION>
<BYLINE>
MITCH ALBOM
</BYLINE>
<AFFILIATION>

</AFFILIATION>
<MEMO>

</MEMO>
<COPYRIGHT>
Copyright (c) 1986, Detroit Free Press
</COPYRIGHT>
<HEADLINE>
HAS CALIFORNIA CHANGED WACKY ONE? BLEEP, NO
</HEADLINE>
<SUBHEAD>

</SUBHEAD>
<CORRECTION>

</CORRECTION>
<BODY>
Oh, he's a knucklehead all right. The Wacky One. Your buddy and mine.
Joaquin Andujar.

  You remember Joaquin from last October, when he single- handedly trashed
the World Series, the umpires,  and most likely the rest of his career by
throwing a tantrum in Game 7? Take it away, Joaquin. Go nuts.

  Put on a show. And what did it get him? A one-way ticket, a new league and
a new uniform --  green and yellow, with an "A" on the cap. He was shipped
out, traded to Oakland, a place where good quiet men such as Al Davis, Reggie
Jackson and Billy Martin had all tried to make a buck.
  Good  company, I figured. But deep down I knew we hadn't heard the last of
the Wacky One. He would be back.
  I had knocked Joaquin last October, and I never regretted it. Not really.
What can you say about  a guy who spits at reporters all year, then  calls a
press conference at the World Series to tell the media how much he likes them?
No one really knew what was boiling beneath the skin of that self-proclaimed
"One Tough Dominican." But I remember a moment in that St. Louis clubhouse
when Joaquin told a group of writers: "You ask any of my teammates. They love
me. Just ask them." I looked around, and it seemed  as if  all the Cardinals
were quietly moving their chairs as far away as possible.
  I knew right then that Joaquin wasn't playing on the same board as the
rest of us.
He's not a mellow fellow 
  But OK, I figured. Bury the hatchet. The A's had hit the beach here in
Detroit on Friday, and a visit with the Wacky One seemed like a good idea.
Andujar, a 20-game winner the last two years, had  already quietly built a 4-2
record. Maybe, I thought, those California winds, the amber sunsets, and the
splash of the Pacific breakers had cooled his hot blood. And maybe not. You
never know with a  knucklehead.
  I walked into the Oakland clubhouse. And there he was. I recognized him
immediately by the cut of his profile, that sharp nose, the jutting chin, the
brooding eyes. He was dressed in  a polo shirt and turquoise jeans, as tight
as a teenager's, and he didn't look happy. 
  "You tell me one pitcher who throws faster than me, man," he was yelling.
"Tell me one!"
  Obviously I  had walked in on something.
  "One?" said teammate Dusty Baker. "OK. There's one." He pointed to Jose
Rijo.
  "You bleeping crazy man. Can he throw 98?"
  "When do you throw 98?"
  "Never  in my life," said Joaquin. 
  It was a strange scene. Several Oakland players sat by their lockers
laughing. Ricky Peters, Tony Phillips, Dave Kingman. Andujar circled like a
hawk, they swung back  and opened fire.
  "You are a bleeping bleep," he said to Peters.
  "No man, you're a bleep," Peters answered.
  "You tell lies behind my back," Andujar said. "You are a bleeping bleep
bleep.  Don't bleep me."
  "Bleep," said Peters.
  "Ah, bleep," said Andujar.
  Then it started coming from every locker. Too fast to record verbatim.
Allow me to paraphrase.
ANDUJAR: "Stay the bleep  away from me. I am warning you, you bleep."
TEAMMATE: "Who the bleep are you talking to?"
ANDUJAR: "Don't bleep with me. You are bleep."
TEAMMATE: "You don't bleep with me I don't bleep with you.  You bleep."
ANDUJAR: "Don't bleep with me."
Doesn't talk in the clubhouse? 
  After a few minutes of this, Andujar stormed into the trainer's room, then
came back out. Peters had a bat in his hand,  and I wasn't crazy about the way
he was squeezing it.
  Andujar finally dropped into his locker, across the room from the seething
mob. I eased over, giving him a few minutes to let the smoke clear.  It didn't
seem like the time for the heart-to-heart chat I had hoped to have. But what
the heck? 
  I asked anyhow.
  "I don't talk in the clubhouse," he said. 
  I could have pressed it, I  guess. Told him I had a plane to catch, or a
sick relative. But why risk it? The man could have a weapon.
  Besides, I had seen enough. The wild man lives. Forget that mellow rubbish.
You can't kill  a knucklehead by sending him west. Uh-uh. This breed knows how
to survive. 
  I headed for safer ground. Maybe next time Joaquin rolls through we'll
have that heart-to-heart. Until then, he remains a hot-tempered mystery. Even
his teammates, obviously, don't know what to make of him as he pulls on his
new green and yellow uniform.
  But they can tell you what the "A" stands for. 
CUTLINE
Joaquin  Andujar
</BODY>
<DISCLAIMER>

</DISCLAIMER>
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