I rooted for the Dodgers when they were in Brooklyn.

Everything I have, I owe to baseball and the Dodgers.

In 1957, I was a 16-year-old office boy for the Dodgers.

The Dodgers to me are the Yankees of the National League.

I've spent more on my Dodger tickets that I did on my car.

A Dodger uniform just doesn't look good with a cummerbund.

I own about 70 L.A. Dodgers snapbacks in different colors.

I hated the Yankees and Dodgers and wound up managing both.

Brooklyn was a famous team. I wanted to play for the Dodgers.

I knew what the Dodgers uniform represented as a kid growing up in Brooklyn.

Rooting for the Dodgers once would have been heresy within my New York family.

If you don't love the Dodgers, there's a good chance you may not get into Heaven.

I grew up a Detroit Tigers fan, and now to be an owner of the Dodgers is amazing.

I hope my daughter, and one day my granddaughters, will be at Dodgers Opening Day.

The only Angels in Los Angeles are in Heaven, and they're looking down on the Dodgers.

I am disappointed and disturbed by both the NFL and the Dodgers - but much more by the Dodgers.

I was huge on basketball and baseball. I love sports. I'm an L.A. guy. I love the Lakers and Dodgers.

I am a season ticket holder to Dodger games. I go to every Dodger game I can go to. Every single one.

I watch the Dodgers every night - no reading anymore - and I dream that I could have hit that home run.

Watching the Dodgers perform at a really high level is a nice reminder to us as to how high the bar is.

Now some alien force seems to have come and captured the Dodgers. I don't know what happened to my Dodgers.

I can't be the Mayor of L.A. I hate the Dodgers. I'm a Yankee fan. Yankee fans can't ever root for the Dodgers.

The old Dodgers were something special, but of my teammates overall, there was nobody like Pee Wee Reese for me.

I like the Dodgers because my dad does - wait, no, not the Dodgers. Strike me down! The Yankees. I like the Yankees.

As a player, to me the Dodgers were the Yankees of the National League because... you either loved them or you hated them.

After you manage the Yankees for 12 years, it's really tough to envision going somewhere else. But then the Dodgers called.

I decided that I wanted a farm back in 1940 when I was with the Dodgers. I tried to find one within commuting distance of New York.

I have great confidence in Rick Caruso's unique qualifications and his ability to lead a successful bid for the Los Angeles Dodgers.

I guess what really made me a Dodgers fan from the beginning was that the team had Jackie Robinson, the first 'Negro' in the major leagues.

I grew up watching the Lakers and the Dodgers and the Rams, all local men's professional teams, and never really had any women that I grew up watching.

The Dodgers told me a big bonus was no good, and they said other players would resent it. Better for me to take a small amount of money and work my way.

The game of baseball is better when the Dodgers are playing well, just like when the Yankees are playing well, or the Cubs, the Phillies, the big-name teams.

I had told my wife that I was thinking of retiring at the end of the year. I was thinking I didn't want to do it anymore, but then I was traded to the Dodgers.

I was a Yankee fan until 1981. That was the year the Yankees were two up on the Dodgers and lost four straight. And George Steinbrenner apologized to the city.

I'm a Kansas City kid, so I love my Royals and Chiefs. I went to the University of Kansas, so I love the Jayhawks. But I live in L.A., so I'm a fan of the Dodgers.

My manager has season tix to the Dodgers, four seats to 40 games, and they're right behind the plate, I mean, they're amazing, food and waiter service, which is insane.

Being Captain of the Dodgers meant representing an organization committed to winning and trying to keep it going. We could have won every year if the breaks had gone right.

My commitment is to Los Angeles, so whatever helps this continue to be a great city, that's what I would be focused to do, and the Dodgers are certainly iconic to Los Angeles.

I have been blessed to win a number of awards and be involved in numerous historical baseball moments over my 20-year career with the Los Angeles Dodgers and San Diego Padres.

Many children work hard to please their parents, but what I truly longed for was good times that were about us, not about me. That is the real hole the Dodgers filled in my life.

There are a handful of legacy clubs like the Dodgers in each league. They're in major markets and have a history of winning where, if you do things right, there's an enormous upside.

An independent Brooklyn probably would have built a new stadium for the Dodgers, so today there might be not just baseball but also the only football team on this side of the Hudson.

I can't tell you how much it means for the Dodgers' front office, who were already winning without me, to bring me over to help win a championship. Hopefully, I can help deliver that.

O'Malley wanted to move the Dodgers out of Brooklyn because he saw the promised land. He was right about that, but to this day I think he was wrong to take the Dodgers out of Brooklyn.

I'm here to win a World Series. I'm excited to be here with my team. I'm excited to be here with the Dodgers. We've got one goal, which is to win, and we're not going to stop until we get it.

If I give dollars to some charity, nobody cares. I mean, it helps the charity, but nobody cares. But if the Dodgers do the same thing, they bring more focus to issues, and that makes it better.

I've been a baseball fan in the early part of my life, so through the '70s and the '80s, I was a huge fan. I actually followed the Dodgers back then, back in the Kirk Gibson years, Steve Garvey.

We are fortunate and blessed to have a partner of Harvey Schiller's stature, who shares our vision for the future of the Dodgers, the city of Los Angeles and our great baseball fans throughout the world.

Even the draft dodgers are not pursued and hounded. They are here on our streets, most of them... unless they are breaking Canadian laws .. are getting American dollars from Ma and Pa at home to spend here.

During the Vietnam era, more than 30,000 draft dodgers and deserters sought harbor in cities like Montreal and Toronto, where public opposition to the war was strong and most residents didn't question their motives.

Share This Page