Joaquín Andújar | |
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Pitcher | |
Born: December 21, 1952 San Pedro de Macorís, Dominican Republic |
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Batted: Switch | Threw: Right |
MLB debut | |
April 8, 1976 for the Houston Astros | |
Last MLB appearance | |
September 30, 1988 for the Houston Astros | |
Career statistics | |
Win–Loss record | 127–118 |
Earned run average | 3.58 |
Strikeouts | 1,032 |
Teams | |
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Career highlights and awards | |
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Joaquín Andújar ( /ænˈduːhɑr/ an-doo-har; born December 21, 1952) is a former Major League Baseball right-handed starting pitcher who became one of the most dominant pitchers in baseball while playing with the St. Louis Cardinals in the mid-80s.
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Andújar signed with the Cincinnati Reds in 1969 a month shy of his seventeenth birthday. He posted a 33-41 record with a 4.33 earned run average over six seasons in the Reds' farm system. Following the 1975 season, he was dealt to the Houston Astros for two players to be named later.
Andújar made his major league debut in the 1976 season opener against his former franchise.[1] After two relief appearances against the Reds, he was moved into the starting rotation. On July 11 & 17, Andújar pitched consecutive 1-0 shutouts against the Montreal Expos[2] and New York Mets.[3] For the season, he went 9-10 with a 3.60 ERA.
Andújar was 10-5 with a 3.47 ERA at the 1977 All-Star break to be named the Astros' sole representative at the All-Star game. However, he injured himself in his final start before the game and could not play.[4] He did not return to his team until September, and finished the season 11-8 with a 3.69 ERA.
Andújar began seeing more work out of the bullpen in 1978 and earned his first career save on August 25 against the Pittsburgh Pirates.[5] He began the 1979 season in the bullpen, and was 4-2 with a 3.23 ERA with three saves and two blown saves when he was added back to the starting rotation. He responded with four consecutive complete game victories in which he gave up just one earned run per game. He was named to his second National League All-Star team, and pitched two innings while giving up two runs (one earned).[6] On August 14, he pitched a four hit complete game against the Montreal Expos while hitting an inside the park home run to account for both of the Astros' runs.[7]
He went 3-8 in 1980 splitting time between starts and relief appearances. The Astros won a one game play-off against the Los Angeles Dodgers to send Andújar to his first post-season. He recorded a save in game two of the 1980 National League Championship Series against the Philadelphia Phillies.[8] After starting the 1981 season 2-3 with a 4.94 ERA, he was dealt to the St. Louis Cardinals for Tony Scott just before the players' strike.
Andújar returned to a starting role with the Cards, and responded by going 6-1 for the rest of the 1981 season. He was a horse for the Cardinals in 1982, as he pitched a career high 265.2 innings. He won his last seven decisions, and had a 1.64 ERA down the stretch to finish the season at 15-10. He pitched a three hit shutout of the Philadelphia Phillies at Veterans Stadium on September 15 that put his team a game and a half up on the Phils in the National League East,[9] a lead they held for the remainder of the season.
The Cards swept the Atlanta Braves in the 1982 National League Championship Series, with Andújar starting and winning game three.[10] He started games three and seven of the 1982 World Series against the Milwaukee Brewers, winning both with a 1.35 ERA. His own error contributed to an unearned run in game three.[11]
Andújar had a career year in 1984. He was 13-6 with a 2.90 ERA at the All-Star break to earn his third All-Star selection, but was unable to attend. He ended the season at 20-14 with a 3.34 ERA, leading the league in wins, innings pitched (261.1) and shutouts (4) while winning the Gold Glove Award at his position.
Andújar got off to a 12-1 start in 1985, and made his fourth All-Star team. The Cardinals and New York Mets' became embroiled in a heated battle for the NL East crown came down to the wire in 1985. Andújar went 3-1 with a 4.29 ERA against the Mets. Perhaps the most memorable game Andújar pitched in the rivalry that developed between the two clubs was a 5-2 loss on October 2 against Dwight Gooden that allowed the Mets to pull within a game of the Cardinals.[12]
The Cardinals won the following day, and ended up taking the division by three games over the Mets. Andújar ended the season at 21-12 with a 3.40 ERA. In the 1985 National League Championship Series, Andújar was ineffective in his game two start against the Los Angeles Dodgers, putting the Cards in a two game hole.[13] The Cards, however, came back to win the following four games (with Andújar starting the decisive game six, but not figuring in the decision)[14] to head to the World Series.
The World Series against the Kansas City Royals went poorly for Andújar. He lasted four plus innings in game three, and took the loss opposite a dominant Bret Saberhagen.[15] John Tudor, meanwhile, was 3-1 with a 1.59 ERA that post-season, leading Cardinals manager Whitey Herzog to go with Tudor in the decisive game seven despite the fact that Andújar was on five days rest.
The strategy failed, as Tudor was pulled in the third with the bases loaded and three runs already on the board. The score was 10-0 by the time Herzog brought Andújar in for mop up duty.[16] When umpire Don Denkinger called a ball, Andújar emphatically showed his disagreement, and had to be restrained by teammates. Herzog exploded and was ejected. A pitch later, Andújar was ejected by Denkinger, who misread a gesture by Andújar to catcher Darrell Porter and again had to be held back by his teammates.
Some believe that Herzog purposely sent the volatile Andújar to the mound as payback for Denkinger's infamous call in Game six. Before getting ejected by Denkinger in Game seven, Herzog said to him, "We wouldn't even be here if you hadn't missed the fucking call last night!" However, Herzog has often stated Andújar was his only pitcher that still had any life left in his arm. Andújar was so furious that after being ejected from Game seven, he took a baseball bat and demolished a toilet in the visitor's clubhouse bathroom in Kansas City's Royals Stadium.[17]
During that Winter's meetings, the Cardinals dealt Andújar to the Oakland Athletics for Tim Conroy and Mike Heath. He was to begin the 1986 season serving a ten-game suspension (later reduced to five) for the World Series altercation with Denkinger. On top of that, on February 28, 1986, Baseball Commissioner Peter Ueberroth handed down season-long suspensions to Andújar and six other players who had admitted to cocaine abuse during the Pittsburgh drug trials.[18] The suspensions were reduced to anti-drug donations and community service.
As luck would have it, Denkinger was the home plate umpire for Andújar's first start of 1986. It was uneventful, though Andújar lasted just four plus innings while giving up six earned runs.[19] Despite his start to the season, Andújar had a decent year in 1986, going 12-7 with a 3.82 ERA. He suffered numerous injuries along the way, including an injury sustained during batting practice even though pitchers do not bat in the American League.
Injuries limited Andújar to just thirteen starts in 1987. The last being on August 3, in which he last just two-thirds of an inning and gave up three runs.[20]
Andújar returned to the Astros to be part of their bullpen for 1988, however, made some starts in the middle of the season due to injuries in the starting rotation. He ended the season at 2-5 with a 4.00 ERA. He tried to make a comeback and negotiated a non-guaranteed $1 million contract with the Montreal Expos in 1989, but he failed to make the team.
Seasons | W | L | PCT | ERA | G | GS | CG | SHO | SV | IP | H | ER | R | HR | BB | K | WP | HBP | Avg |
13 | 127 | 118 | .518 | 3.58 | 405 | 305 | 68 | 19 | 9 | 2153 | 2016 | 857 | 955 | 155 | 731 | 1032 | 33 | 51 | .127 |
For his career, Andújar held batters to a .224 batting average while batting .127 with five home runs and 38 runs batted in himself.
Preceded by John Denny |
National League Wins Champion 1984 |
Succeeded by Dwight Gooden |
Preceded by John Denny |
NL Comeback Player of the Year 1984 |
Succeeded by Rick Reuschel |
Preceded by Phil Niekro |
National League Gold Glove Award (P) 1984 |
Succeeded by Rick Reuschel |
Andújar started a trucking business in his home country of the Dominican Republic. He has been active in youth baseball programs in his home country and has been generous in hurricane relief.
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