Tommy Lasorda’s Cause of Death Revealed! Condolences to Dodgers

USdayNEWS
3 min readJan 8, 2021

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Tommy Lasorda, a Dodger from his cleats to his cap, passed away at 93. Tommy Lasorda’s cause of death seems to be a sudden cardiopulmonary arrest.

The charismatic late manager of the Los Angeles Dodgers who sustained contact with the franchise as a player, coach, manager, and executive for 71 seasons, Tommy Lasorda, has passed away.

Tommy Lasorda was a great man, the one who will remain in the minds.

“I’ll never want to take off this uniform,” Tommy informed USA TODAY Sports in an interview, 2014. “I want to keep working for the Dodgers until the day I die. That’s the truth.” That’s precisely what he did.

Lasorda underwent a sudden cardiopulmonary arrest at his house at 10:09 p.m. Thursday. He was immediately transported to the hospital with resuscitation in advance. Unfortunately, he was declared dead at 10:57 p.m.

Our thoughts and prayers are with the Dodgers and Tommy Lasorda’s entire family.

Not too far, New York Times best-selling writer passed away. Eric Jerome Dickey’s death cause was a prolonged illness.

Tommy Lasorda’s Cause of Death Shocks Dodger’s Fans

“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,” Stan Kasten, Dodger president, and CEO, stated in an announcement. “A tireless spokesman for baseball, his dedication to the sport and the team he loved was unmatched.”

Kasten said that he was a champion who, at significant moments, apparently willed his teams to win. The Dodgers and all their fans will miss Tommy remarkably. He is quite entirely unique and unforgettable.

Stated Rob Manfred, MLB commissioner, in a declaration that Tommy Lasorda was one of the best managers their game has ever known. He enjoyed living as a Dodger. Rob said that his passion, success, charm, and sense of humor aimed him into a beloved international celebrity, a stature that Tommy used to grow their sport.

Tommy posted a career record of 1,599–1,439 as the manager of Dodgers from 1976 to 1996. His teams won eight division titles through that span, four National League streamers, and two World Series championships.

Tommy Lasorda Loves the Dodgers

Tommy Lasorda was inducted into the Baseball Hall of Fame in 1997.

Although his primary league profession as a pitcher served just three seasons from 1954–56, Tommy found his real mission as a manager. Following leading his teams to 4 championships in the minor leagues, he got the call to join the Hall of Fame manager Walter Alston, Los Angeles, in 1973 as the third-base coach of the team.

While Alston parted at the tail end of the 1976 season, Tommy took over and started his legendary 20-year run as the manager of Dodgers.

Under Lasorda, the Dodgers were constant playoff contenders, which generally put him in the media spotlight. His bright personality — and seldom colorful language — only served to increase his fame.

Tommy’s most significant achievements as a manager were known as the World Series-winning seasons of 1981 — among star rookie pitcher Fernando Valenzuela managing the way over the New York Yankees — and 1988 — while an ailing Kirk Gibson scored a game-winning pinch-hit homer in the rear of the ninth inning of Game 1 upon the Oakland A’s.

Nevertheless, Tommy’s notoriety protracted far beyond the dugout and clubhouse.

The man had variously remarkable (and hilarious) encounters in Philadelphia with the Phillie Phanatic mascot.

Originally published at https://usdaynews.com on January 8, 2021.

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