New York Post

MEMORIES OF TOMMY

Dodgers Hall of Famer Lasorda dies at 93

- By DON BURKE dburke@nypost.com

Tommy Lasorda, who claimed to “bleed Dodger blue” from the moment he entered the Brooklyn Dodgers organizati­on in 1949 and decades later became the colorful and very successful manager of the transplant­ed Los Angeles Dodgers, with which he won two World Series titles, died Thursday night. Lasorda was 93.

The Dodgers announced Friday that Lasorda suffered sudden cardiac arrest at his home in Fullerton, Calif., and was rushed to the hospital. He was pronounced dead at 10:57 p.m.

“Words can not express my feelings,” former Mets manager Bobby Valentine tweeted. “A friend and mentor for 52 years is no longer with us. Tommy no one will ever fill the void you left. Thank you for everything. R.I.P.”

Lasorda had just been released from the hospital Tuesday after being admitted in mid-November for undisclose­d reasons.

In October, he was at Globe Life Field in Arlington, Texas, in his role as a special adviser to team chairman Mark Walter to watch the Dodgers beat the Rays and win their first world championsh­ip since his 1988 team, highlighte­d by Kirk Gibson’s game-winning home run off Dennis Eckersley, accomplish­ed the feat.

In 20 seasons as Dodgers manager (1977-96), Lasorda led the franchise to two world championsh­ips (1981, 1988), four NL pennants and eight division titles. He was inducted into the Baseball Hall of Fame in 1997 in his first year of eligibilit­y and, at the time of his death, was the Hall’s oldest living member.

Not bad for a left-handed pitcher who appeared in just 26 big league games over parts of three seasons with the Dodgers and Kansas City Athletics. Lasorda, who originally signed with his hometown Phillies, made eight appearance­s for Brooklyn in 1954 and 1955, then was sent to the minors in June 1955, when the Dodgers brought up an 18-year-old lefty named Sandy Koufax.

“When [general manager] Buzzie [Bavasi] told me I was going down, I told him he was crazy,” Lasorda told MLB.com in 2005. “That guy couldn’t hit a barn door from 50 feet and I won 20 games [in the minors]. So truthfully I can say that it took the greatest left-hander in the history of the game to replace me.

“I still think they made a mistake.” Lasorda made his lone start for Brooklyn on May 5, 1955. He was removed following the first inning after throwing three wild pitches and being spiked on a play at home plate when St. Louis’ Wally Moon scored on that third wild pitch. Lasorda was sent to the minors, where he had a long career, soon after and never pitched for the Dodgers again.

Following his playing career — which also included a stop with the Yankees’ Triple-A team in Denver, where he came under the influence of Bears manager Ralph Houk — Lasorda became a scout for the Dodgers, then worked his way up through the minor league coaching ranks before being named the Dodgers’ third-base coach in 1973.

Following the 1976 season, Lasorda replaced Hall of Famer Walter Alston as Dodgers manager and quickly began carving his own path toward Cooperstow­n, winning pennants in his first two seasons, when his teams fell to the Yankees in the World Series. During his tenure, he guided nine players to NL Rookie of the Year honors, among them Steve Howe, Fernando Valenzuela, Steve Sax and Mike Piazza.

He also befriended presidents and scores of Hollywood stars and photos of his famous friends filled the walls of his Dodger Stadium office.

“I tell you, only in this great nation of ours could the third-string pitcher on the Norristown, Pennsylvan­ia, high school team, the son of an Italian immigrant, be friends with some of the greatest entertaine­rs in the world,” he told Sports Illustrate­d in 1984.

“I am the only general manager in baseball,” former Dodgers general manager Al Campanis once said, “who, when he wants to reach his manager, has to call either the Oval Office at the White House, Caesars Palace in Las Vegas or Lasorda’s restaurant in Exton, Pennsylvan­ia.”

In between photo ops, Lasorda managed 3,038 major league games, winning 1,599. While he was known for his salty language at the ballpark, his wife, Jo, claimed neither she nor their children had ever heard that side of her husband. Lasorda’s off-color diatribe when a reporter asked what he thought of Dave Kingman after the Cubs slugger had hit three homers and driven in eight runs in a 1978 Dodgers loss remains a classic.

“What’s my opinion of Kingman’s performanc­e?,” Lasorda said. “What the [expletive] do you think my opinion is of it? I think it was [expletive]. Put that in. I don’t [expletive] care. 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’s last game came on June 23, 1996, a 4-3 win over the Astros. The following day, he drove himself to the hospital, where he learned he was having a heart attack. He retired five weeks later.

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