ROANOKE TIMES 
                      Copyright (c) 1996, Roanoke Times

DATE: Tuesday, July 30, 1996                 TAG: 9607300099
SECTION: SPORTS                   PAGE: B-1  EDITION: METRO 
DATELINE: LOS ANGELES
SOURCE: Associated Press 


DODGER BLUES FOR LASORDA

TOMMY LASORDA, recovering from a heart attack, steps down as the Los Angeles manager after deciding his health was more important.

Tommy Lasorda, who began bleeding Dodger blue when the team still played in Brooklyn, left the job he loved and lived for 20 years when he retired Monday as Los Angeles' manager.

Choking back tears at one point and spinning old baseball yarns at another, Lasorda said health concerns and the desire to spend more time with his family convinced him to leave the dugout and become a team vice president.

Lasorda, 68, underwent an angioplasty June 26 to clear an artery after it was determined he'd had a heart attack. He said he was cleared medically to return to the dugout, but realized it made sense to retire.

``For me to get into a uniform again - as excitable as I am - I could not go down there without being the way I am,'' said Lasorda, his voice shaking, at a Dodger Stadium news conference. ``I decided it's best for me and the organization to step down. ... That's quite a decision.''

``It was a heck of a run,'' he said.

During his two decades, there were a total of 185 managerial changes in the major leagues. Lasorda became the fourth big-league manager to last into his 20th season - joining Connie Mack, John McGraw and Walter Alston. It was Alston's retirement after 23 years that opened the job for Lasorda.

Lasorda, who has spent 47 years in the Dodgers' organization as a player, scout, coach and manager, led Los Angeles to the World Series championship in 1981 and again in 1988 - a memorable five-game victory over the heavily favored Oakland Athletics highlighted by the limping Kirk Gibson's dramatic pinch-hit homer to win the opening game.

The Dodgers also reached the World Series under Lasorda in 1977 and 1978, and won National League West Division titles in 1983, 1985 and 1995.

Bill Russell, who played shortstop under Lasorda in the late 1970s and early '80s and later had him as his mentor, will remain the interim manager through this season. During Lasorda's absence, Russell had a 14-16 record.

The decision to step down as the manager was completely his, Lasorda said. He said as recently as Friday, after receiving medical clearance from his doctors to go back to work, he intended to return to the dugout.

Lasorda changed his mind, however, after talking with Dodgers owner Peter O'Malley and executive vice president Fred Claire.

``Peter gave me all the confidence in the world,'' Lasorda said. ``Peter told me, `You're the manager. If you want to go down there and put on that uniform, you're the manager.'''

Said O'Malley: ``I think it's fair to say the last three days - Friday, Saturday and Sunday - that he was wrestling with it. Even though he didn't say it, I could tell that he and Jo [Lasorda's wife] were wrestling with it.

``As much as he had said after he was hospitalized that he was going to manage again, I could tell that he was wrestling with it. And perhaps family and close friends were saying, `Hey, Tommy, wait a second. Think about this a little bit more.' And I think he did.''

Lasorda, who has spent 47 of his 50 years in pro baseball with the Dodgers' organization and professes to ``bleed Dodger blue,'' grew teary-eyed as he thanked O'Malley for hiring him 20 years earlier.

A few minutes later, though, Lasorda's eyes lit up as he spoke about becoming a vice president.

``I always used to look up at Fred and Al [Campanis] and those guys who were vice presidents, and now I'm a vice president of the Dodgers,'' Lasorda said, his voice rising. ``That's an honor and a privilege. And I'm going to do the best job I possibly can for the Dodgers because I love this organization.

``I've been with them for 47 years and I'm hoping that maybe 50 years from now I'll die a Dodger.''

Lasorda finishes his on-the-field career as a rarity in modern professional sports: He spent two decades managing the same team.

There's a baseball axiom that says there are two kinds of managers: those who have been fired and those who are about to be. But that never applied to Lasorda.

The Dodgers were 41-35 and had a two-game lead in the NL West Division when Lasorda entered the hospital. They entered Monday's action tied for second place with Colorado, 1 1/2 games behind San Diego.


LENGTH: Medium:   80 lines
ILLUSTRATION: PHOTO:  (headshot) Lasorda.














































by CNB