Dave Roberts is on the verge of a milestone that fits the scale of what he’s already built in Los Angeles: 1,000 wins as Dodgers manager.
For a club that has spent the last decade piling up division titles, pennants and championships under his watch, the number feels almost inevitable. Roberts has been in charge for a little more than 10 seasons, and the Dodgers have reached the playoffs in all 10 of them. In that span, they’ve won nine National League West titles, five pennants and three World Series championships.
Roberts said he plans to actually pause and appreciate this one.
“It’s a big number,” said Roberts, who will join Walter Alston, Tommy Lasorda and Wilbert Robinson as the only managers in franchise history to win 1,000 games. “It’s something I never really thought of.
… I don’t take a lot of time to look at milestones because I just kind of go day to day. But I’m going to take that one in.
Because it’s a long time, it’s a lot of really good players and coaches, and a lot of support.”
That’s in keeping with how Roberts has long been described around the game: a manager who handles the dugout, yes, but also the human side of it. Freddie Freeman praised him last year for truly caring about players and keeping them on top of their game.
Roberts recently put that part of the job into his own words during an interview with David Vassegh of AM 570 L.A. Sports.
“I would say it’s the biggest part of the job,” Roberts said during an interview David Vassegh of AM 570 L.A. Sports. “If you have a pie chart, I would say the mental counseling, mentoring side of the job, I would say is probably 35, 40%.
“And I think the in-game, which gets a lot of the scrutiny and criticism, is probably 30%. There’s a lot of different slices to the pie of my job, but I will say it’s the biggest part and most satisfying part of my job.”
The win total itself puts Roberts in rare Dodgers company. He enters the milestone fourth all-time among franchise managers with 999 victories, behind only Walter Alston, Tommy Lasorda and Wilbert Robinson.
The larger résumé is just as striking. Roberts owns a .623 winning percentage, the best of any manager in MLB history with at least 315 games. Only three Negro League managers sit ahead of him: Bullet Rogan (.698), Vic Harris (.663) and Rube Foster (.633).
He has also kept the Dodgers at a level of consistency few clubs ever reach. Every full season of his tenure has ended with at least 90 wins. The exception came in the shortened 2020 season, when Los Angeles finished 43-17, the best record in the majors.
Now the Dodgers are on pace for 105 wins this year, which would give Roberts his sixth century mark season as manager. And with Los Angeles trying to become the first team in 26 years to win three straight World Series titles, the next number on his list carries more than just personal significance.
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