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The free-spirited pitcher could throw a fastball and sing a song, and wherever he went, people had fun and laughed, and that was “Lima Time.” Jose Lima was more than simply a baseball player; he was a showman whose energy could light up any ballpark. His impact in Dodger blue is still strong, even after two decades. And how can the Dodgerland forget his 2004 NLDS complete game against the Cardinals wasn’t just a statistical anomaly—it was pure theatre.

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Now, twenty years later, that record has just become the talk of the town. Why? Well, during NLCS Game 2, Yoshinobu Yamamoto wrote his name into history, giving that legacy new life. Yamamoto became the first Dodger to throw a complete postseason game since Lima. Let’s rewalk through Jose Lima’s legacy.

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Who is Jose Lima? Everything to know about ex-Dodgers’ star

Jose Desiderio Rodríguez Lima was from Santiago, Dominican Republic. He had one of the finest arms in the league and a sense of rhythm that made him impossible to ignore. His teammates often claimed that when you met Lima, you could feel him. He made every clubhouse a place where the dressing room and dugout were filled with laughter and good music.

“Sweet home Dominicana,” Jose Lima would regularly sing the tune of a Lynyrd Skynyrd, “where you can lie about your age!”

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It wasn’t speed or pitch movement that set him apart; it was faith. Lima acted like every start was a big deal, even when his fastball was in the upper 80s. Former teammates remembered him forecasting wins and then celebrating them like they were encore performances. It wasn’t arrogance; it was strong belief, clothed in charm.

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When Los Angeles signed him in 2004, most didn’t think he would get better. But Lima brought back his enthusiasm and leadership, making him the heart of that Dodgers team. His return wasn’t only a matter of numbers; it was also emotional. It showed that personality can sometimes keep a clubhouse together.

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Mariano Duncan, the Dodgers’ first base coach and a former major league infielder, expressed heartfelt words for the pitcher who passed away on May 23, 2010, due to a heart attack. Duncan said, “He had a good fastball, a good changeup and good breaking ball. He was a good baseball player and a good friend. Nobody enjoyed the game more than him, and we’re going to miss him.”

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It’s been more than a decade since he passed away, but his memories and performance still live in the baseball arena.

A look at his MLB career: Stats, records, and playoff glory

Jose Lima has played for six different MLB teams over the course of 13 years, starting with the Detroit Tigers in 1994 and ending with the New York Mets in 2006. He had a record of 89 wins and 102 losses in 348 games, with a 5.26 ERA and 980 strikeouts. Those figures merely hint at a career based on strength, not supremacy.

In 1999, he had his best season with Houston, winning 21 games, getting an All-Star selection, and giving a division-winning team a boost. A year later, when he moved to Enron Field, which was better for home runs, his fly-ball approach hurt him, as his ERA went above 6.65. But Lima wouldn’t give up; he kept working on his mechanics until another chance came up.

The second act reached its zenith on October 9, 2004, when he hurled a complete-game shutout against St. Louis in the NLDS. This ended the Dodgers’ 16-year postseason drought. He threw cutters and changeups with unshakable confidence, and he became a legend in Dodger history that lasted until Yoshinobu Yamamoto did it in 2025.

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