Dodgers icon Tommy Lasorda dies at 93
He is number 250 on the list. He represents exactly half the original 500 on the list.
Tommy Lasorda, the son of Italian immigrants and a professional pitcher who became a legendary Dodgers manager, global baseball ambassador and national treasure, died on Thursday. He was 93.
Commissioner Rob Manfred issued the following statement:
“Tommy Lasorda was one of the finest managers our game has
ever known. He loved life as a Dodger. His career began as a pitcher in 1949
but he is, of course, best known as the manager of two World Series champions
and four pennant-winning clubs. His passion, success, charisma and sense of
humor turned him into an international celebrity, a stature that he used to
grow our sport. Tommy welcomed Dodger players from Mexico, the Dominican
Republic, Japan, South Korea and elsewhere -- making baseball a stronger, more
diverse and better game. He served Major League Baseball as the Global
Ambassador for the first two editions of the World Baseball Classic and managed
Team USA to gold in the 2000 Summer Olympics in Sydney. Tommy loved family, the
United States, the National Pastime and the Dodgers, and he made them all proud
during a memorable baseball life.
“I am extremely fortunate to have developed a wonderful
friendship with Tommy and will miss him. It feels appropriate that in his final
months, he saw his beloved Dodgers win the World Series for the first time
since his 1988 team. On behalf of Major League Baseball, I send my deepest
sympathy to his wife of 70 years, Jo, and their entire family, the Dodger organization
and their generations of loyal fans.”
In three seasons as a Major League pitcher, Lasorda went 0-4
and reminded nobody of Sandy Koufax, who replaced him on the Brooklyn roster.
But as the Dodgers manager for two decades, Lasorda crafted a body of work that
earned him a place alongside Koufax in baseball’s Hall of Fame. Before his
death, Lasorda was the oldest living Hall of Famer, a distinction that now
passes to Willie Mays, 89.
He died after serving in his 71st season with the Dodgers,
an extraordinary display of loyalty. He spent the past two decades as a special
advisor to the chairman (currently Mark Walter), having been rescued by
previous chairman Frank McCourt from an exile imposed when News Corp. bought
the club from Peter O’Malley and his sister, Terry Seidler.
“My family, my partners and I were blessed to have spent a
lot of time with Tommy,” said Walter in a statement. “He was a great ambassador
for the team and baseball, a mentor to players and coaches, he always had time
for an autograph and a story for his many fans and he was a good friend. He
will be dearly missed.”
Lasorda’s career began as a smallish left-handed pitcher
with a big heart and fighting spirit. When that dream ended, he switched to
scouting, then built a résumé as a Minor League manager, Major League
third-base coach, Hall of Fame Major League manager, acting general manager and
senior vice president.
He earned eight honorary doctorate degrees, had an asteroid
named after him by Cal Tech, had a wife (Jo) of 70 years and was still making
appearances every year on behalf of the Dodgers and MLB. He is in 17 Halls of
Fame, and if they had one for eating, he’d be in there, too. He savored the
“fruits of victory,” not to mention industrial-sized portions of linguini and
clams.
Lasorda was inducted into the National Baseball Hall of Fame
in 1997 on the strength of 20-plus seasons managing the Dodgers (1976-96). He
is one of only four managers in big league history to manage the same team for
20 years or more -- the others being Connie Mack, John McGraw and Lasorda's
predecessor, Walter Alston.
"In a franchise that has celebrated such great legends of the game, no one who wore the uniform embodied the Dodger spirit as much as Tommy Lasorda," Dodger president and CEO Stan Kasten said. "A tireless spokesman for baseball, his dedication to the sport and the team he loved was unmatched. He was a champion who at critical moments seemingly willed his teams to victory. The Dodgers and their fans will miss him terribly. Tommy is quite simply irreplaceable and unforgettable."
Lasorda retired as manager after suffering a heart attack in
1996, having won the World Series in 1981 and '88, plus four National League
pennants and eight division titles. He was 3-1 as an All-Star manager. His
1,599 wins rank 22nd all time.
Baseball’s undisputed goodwill ambassador managed the U.S.
Olympic baseball team to a gold medal in 2000. In 2009, his portrait was hung
in the National Portrait Gallery of the Smithsonian Institute. In 2008, he
received the Order of the Rising Sun, Gold Rays with Rosette from the emperor
of Japan, just one of many heads of state Lasorda considered his friends.
Lasorda is one of only two managers in the history of
baseball to win pennants in his first two years of managing, joining Gabby
Street, who did so with the Cardinals in 1930 and '31. Lasorda managed nine
National League Rookies of the Year, a Major League record. And he served as
the official ambassador of the World Baseball Classic in 2006 and '09.
As a pitcher, he was known mostly for his fighting. He never
could take that final step from Triple-A dominance into Major League success as
a pitcher, compiling an 0-4 record in brief trials with the Dodgers and Kansas
City A's.
Alston managed Lasorda at Triple-A Montreal and in Brooklyn and considered the lefty a better cheerleader than pitcher. When the Dodgers sent Lasorda back to Triple-A in 1955, it was to clear a roster spot for a newly signed bonus baby -- Koufax.
Lasorda, though, would go on to baseball fame and fortune
that nobody could have predicted, not even him. It was mentor and then-scouting
director Al Campanis who told Lasorda in 1960 that his playing days were over,
cushioning the news by hiring him as a scout. When Campanis became general
manager, he made Lasorda a Rookie League manager, first in Pocatello, Idaho,
then Ogden, Utah.
It was there, and later at Triple-A Spokane, where Lasorda
formed the bond with what would become the nucleus of the Dodgers of the 1970s
-- Steve Garvey, Bobby Valentine, Bill Russell, Willie Crawford, Charlie Hough,
Tom Paciorek, Bill Buckner, Tommy Hutton, Ron Cey and others.
Lasorda, who credited Ralph Houk as his managerial role model, polished his motivational skills teaching these raw talents how to play and win. He blazed the trail as a manager who became close with his players, and Joe Torre said it was Lasorda who brought the managerial hug into the game. Lasorda would socialize with his players, usually over dinner, yet still command their respect.
His people skills and his outsized personality are what people will think of when they remember him. When the Dodgers acquired future Hall of Famer Eddie Murray in December 1988, Lasorda immediately went to work on his psyche.
Murray was 32 at the time and embittered after a 12-season run with the Orioles ended with him unhappy with the team’s front office, the direction of the franchise and the media.
In their very first conversation, Lasorda said: “Eddie, remember what it was like playing in your neighborhood with your friends and brothers? That’s what it’s going to be like playing for the Dodgers.”
Orel Hershiser stuck his head in Tommy Lasorda’s office one afternoon and said: “I’ve been thinking about that one last night, and it’s bothering me. I owe you one.”
In reviewing a loss to the Pirates in his head, Hershiser was unhappy with his pitch selection at a couple of key points. Those pitches, he felt, had cost the Dodgers a game and he wanted his manager to know.
“That one’s on me,” Hershiser said.
Lasorda interrupted.
“Bulldog, you don’t owe me anything,” he said. “You’re the best. Get out of here.”
When Hershiser departed, Lasorda turned to me and said: “You see why I love that guy?”
And then Dodgers outfielder Kirk Gibson appeared at Lasorda’s door waving a copy of a recent Sports Illustrated.
“Tommy, this guy says I’m a caveman,” Gibson said.
Lasorda pointed to a chair in front of his desk, and over the next couple of minutes, talked his star right fielder down.
“Hey, stop it,” he said. “Everyone in this game knows how good you are.”
Lasorda was profane, sometimes profound, always entertaining. He was effective enough as a teacher that 75 players he managed in the Minor Leagues reached the Major Leagues.
He played with Jackie Robinson and Duke Snider, and coached third base under manager Walter Alston. He handed big league debuts to Fernando Valenzuela, Hideo Nomo, and Pedro Martínez.
“Tommy took a chance on me and went to bat for me time and time again,”
Mike Piazza said Friday. “In a room full of doubters, Tommy was the one
person that believed in me. Not because he was my father’s best friend
and my brother’s Godfather but, because he saw something in me that I
didn’t always see in myself. He taught me a lot about the game but most
importantly about life.”
Lasorda is survived by his wife, Jo; daughter, Laura, and granddaughter, Emily. Lasorda’s son, Tom Jr., died in 1991.
Some of his other key players and coaches were: Delino DeShields, Eric Karros, Brett Butler, Mike Piazza, Greg Gagne, Raúl Mondesí, Todd Hollandsworth, Tom Candiotti, Todd Worrell, Ismael Valdez, Tim Wallach, Mark Guthrie, Ramón Martínez, Chan Ho Park, Vin Scully, Kevin Tapani, Roberto Kelly, José Offerman, Eric Davis, Darryl Strawberry, Jim Gott, Roger McDowell, Peter O'Malley, Bob Ojeda, John Candelaria, Mike Sharperson, Pedro Martinez, Kevin Gross, Cory Snyder, Mike Scioscia, Bill Russell, Gary Carter, Alfredo Griffin, Juan Samuel, Lenny Harris, Mike Morgan, Tim Belcher, John Wetteland, Hubie Brooks, José Vizcaíno, Don Drysdale, Mike Marshall, Willie Randolph, Jay Howell, Don Sutton, Steve Sax, Jesse Orosco, Pedro Guerrero, John Tudor, Candy Maldonado, Tim Leary, Bill Madlock, Jerry Reuss, Bob Welch, Rick Honeycutt, Mariano Duncan, Tom Niedenfuer, Dusty Baker, Rick Monday, Ron Cey, Steve Garvey, Dave Stewart, Steve Howe, Davey Lopes, Rick Sutcliffe, Ken Landreaux, Charlie Hough, Burt Hooton, Reggie Smith, Manny Mota, Tommy John, Rick Rhoden, Boog Powell, Jeffrey Leonard, Bill Buckner, Roy Oswalt, Doug Mientkiewicz and Ben Sheets.
His former teammates, managers, and team owners include: Lou Boudreau, Merle Harmon, Harry Simpson, Vic Power, Héctor López, Enos Slaughter, Buzzie Bavasi, Walter Alston, Roy Campanella, Gil Hodges, Pee Wee Reese, Don Zimmer, Preacher Roe, Don Hoak, Carl Erskine, Jim Gilliam, Carl Furillo, Don Newcombe and Roger Craig.
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