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Home Games Tommy Lasorda Baseball
Tommy Lasorda Baseball
Sega Genesis / Mega DriveSports

Tommy Lasorda Baseball

Developer: Sega · Published by Sega · 1989
A Genesis launch-window swing with the Dodgers skipper on the box.
BaseballSports2-PlayerLaunch Title
Not yet reviewed
About This Game

Tommy Lasorda Baseball is a baseball video game developed and published by Sega for the Sega Genesis. It released in North America in 1989, during the console's launch window, and takes its name from Tommy Lasorda, the longtime manager of the Los Angeles Dodgers. The game is closely related to Sega's Japanese baseball releases for the system and was reworked with Lasorda's name for the American market.

As an early Genesis sports title, it offers a straightforward presentation of the sport with a behind-the-pitcher batting view and standard exhibition play for one or two players. It carries no Major League Baseball or players' union license, so while Lasorda's name is attached to the box, the teams and players are generic rather than real franchises and rosters.

The game is historically notable less for its depth than for its timing. It was one of the titles available near the Genesis launch in the United States and helped fill out the console's early sports lineup, before Sega's later, more polished sports efforts and before EA's Genesis sports franchises arrived. For players who bought a Genesis in its first year, it was often an early introduction to baseball on the platform.

Today it is a common and low-cost cartridge, and it runs without trouble on Sega Genesis emulators. It has not featured prominently in Sega's later Genesis compilation releases, which keeps it more of a collector and enthusiast curiosity than a frequently revisited classic.

Screenshots3 shots
Tommy Lasorda Baseball screenshotTommy Lasorda Baseball screenshotTommy Lasorda Baseball screenshot
In Features & Editorial1 mentions
The Men Who Handed Me the Controller
Adam had three father figures, and every one of them put a console or a keyboard in his hands. One made him a Sega guy for life. One handed him the web software that built POCG. One bought him a PlayStation just so he could keep writing.
Jun 21, 2026
How to Play TodayYour options for running this game in 2026
Original Hardware
Requires a Sega Genesis and the cartridge, which is common and low-cost on the secondhand market.
Modern Re-release
No notable modern re-release. It has not appeared in the Sega Genesis Classics collections.
Emulation / Other Options
Runs without issues in any Sega Genesis emulator.