Baltimore Sun

Baseball was better with Lasorda in it

- By Tim Dahlberg

Tommy Lasorda loved the game of baseball more than anything.

If it was somehow possible, he loved the Dodgers even more.

Lasorda lived his life wrapped in Dodger Blue, and when he took his last breath Thursday night at the age of 93 my guess is he was still certain of one thing

“If you don’t love the Dodgers,” Lasorda liked to say, “there’s a good chance you may not get into Heaven.”

Under that set of qualificat­ions, Lasorda is already there. No need to present his credential­s at the Pearly Gates, even if he didn’t show up in his gleaming white uniform with Dodgers scrawled in blue on the front and a big No. 2 on the back.

He lived long enough to see the Dodgers break the drought of his lifetime and win the team’s first World Series since he, Kirk Gibson and Orel Hershiser gave them the most improbable one 32 years earlier. His last wish was to see the Dodgers finally win again and, though frail, he traveled to Texas in October to see it happen.

Still, even in death, there’s one wish remaining.

“I want my wife to put the Dodgers’ schedule on my tombstone,” Lasorda often said. “When people are in the cemetery visiting their loved ones, they’ll say, ‘Let’s go to Lasorda’s grave and see if the Dodgers are playing today.”’

Fans will have to wait a few months to do that, but Lasorda’s tombstone figures to be a popular gathering place before games. He was true Dodger royalty and, along with Vin Scully, one of the last remaining bridges between Ebbets Field and Dodger Stadium.

Now he’s gone, even as Vinny mourns the passing of his wife earlier in the week.

“There will never be anybody like Tommy Lasorda,” said Steve Brener, the public relations director for the Dodgers during Lasorda’s reign. “He was like a second father to me.”

If, in the end, the measure of a man’s life may be found in the number of stories told about him, Lasorda lived a life way beyond his 93 years.

He fought the Phillie Phanatic on the field after the mascot dared to disparage his beloved Dodgers, and traded punches with the hated Giants at Candlestic­k Park. He won one World Series with a ragtag team that probably didn’t even deserve to be in it, then summoned Gibson out of the clubhouse to help him win a second.

In between he engaged in clubhouse rants, feasted on lasagna in his office with Frank Sinatra and gave his opinion to anyone who asked — and even those who didn’t. The tapes of his postgame rants about Kurt Bevacqua and Dave Kingman are undergroun­d classics that will live in baseball lore forever.

So, Tommy, what did you think about Kingman hitting three home runs against the Dodgers?

“What’s my opinion of Kingman’s performanc­e? What the (expletive) do you think my opinion is of it? I think it was (expletive). Put that in I don’t (expletive) care,” he said. “What’s my opinion of his performanc­e? (expletive). He beat us with three (expletive) home runs. What the (expletive) do you mean? What is my opinion of his performanc­e? How can you ask me a question like that? I’m (expletive) off to lose a (expletive) game, and you ask me my opinion of his performanc­e?”

Lasorda spent 71 seasons with the Dodgers, earning his first World Series ring in 1955 as a left-handed pitcher in Brooklyn. He was a better manager than a pitcher, leading the Dodgers to four World Series and winning two of them. For the last 14 years of his life he was a special adviser to the team, sitting in his seat next to the Dodger dugout at every home game.

Brener remembered him as both a master motivator and a masterful promoter who reveled in the celebrity scene around him. The Hollywood elite loved him back.

Sinatra was a pal and promised Lasorda he would sing the national anthem at opening day if he got the Dodger managerial job. Sure enough, Sinatra was at home plate delivering the tune when the Dodgers opened in 1977.

“Nobody has to tell Frank Sinatra he is a

 ?? MARCIO JOSE SANCHEZ/AP ?? Flowers are placed in front of Tommy Lasorda’s retired No. 2 on Friday at Dodger Stadium in Los Angeles. Lasorda died Thursday night.
MARCIO JOSE SANCHEZ/AP Flowers are placed in front of Tommy Lasorda’s retired No. 2 on Friday at Dodger Stadium in Los Angeles. Lasorda died Thursday night.

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