The Los Angeles Dodgers have always understood that some players deserve more than a championship ring or a standing ovation. Retiring a number is the franchise's highest honor, a permanent promise that no one will ever wear those digits again.
#32 - Sandy Koufax (retired June 4 1972) (Hall of Fame)
Sandy Koufax was one of the most dominant pitchers baseball has ever seen, and his time in a Dodgers uniform left a legacy that still feels almost impossible to believe. He posted a 2.76 ERA over 2,324 innings pitched, striking out 2,396 batters with a combination of a blazing fastball and a curveball that hitters described as unhittable. The Dodgers retired number 32 to honor a career that burned brilliantly and defined an era of Dodgers baseball.
Career: 165-87 · 2.76 ERA · 2,396 K · 2,324 IP
Shop the Sandy Koufax plaque ($26) →
#42 - Jackie Robinson (retired June 4 1972) (Hall of Fame)
Jackie Robinson carried the weight of history on his shoulders when he broke Major League Baseball's color barrier, and he did it with extraordinary grace and extraordinary talent. In 1,382 games he batted .311, drove in 734 runs, and stole 197 bases, proving every single day that he belonged at the highest level of the game. Number 42 was retired by the Dodgers and later by all of Major League Baseball, a recognition that Robinson's courage and brilliance changed not just a sport but a nation.
Career: 1,382 G · .311 AVG · 137 HR · 734 RBI · 1,518 H
Shop the Jackie Robinson plaque ($18) →
The Whole Lineup on One Plaque
Can't pick just one? The Los Angeles Dodgers All-Time Greats plaque brings the franchise legends together on a single piece.
Shop the Los Angeles Dodgers All-Time Greats plaque ($52) →
The Complete List of Los Angeles Dodgers Retired Numbers
Every number the Los Angeles Dodgers have officially retired, in order, with career totals and Hall of Famers marked.
| Number | Player | Retired | Career Stats |
|---|---|---|---|
| #1 | Pee Wee Reese (Hall of Fame) | 1984 | 2,166 G · .269 AVG · 126 HR · 885 RBI · 2,170 H |
| #2 | Tommy Lasorda (Hall of Fame) | 1997 | — |
| #4 | Duke Snider (Hall of Fame) | 1980 | 2,143 G · .295 AVG · 407 HR · 1,333 RBI · 2,116 H |
| #14 | Gil Hodges (Hall of Fame) | 2022 | 2,071 G · .273 AVG · 370 HR · 1,274 RBI · 1,921 H |
| #19 | Jim Gilliam | 1978 | 1,956 G · .265 AVG · 65 HR · 558 RBI · 1,889 H |
| #20 | Don Sutton (Hall of Fame) | 1998 | 324-256 · 3.26 ERA · 3,574 K · 5,282 IP |
| #24 | Walter Alston (Hall of Fame) | 1977 | 1 G · .--- AVG · 0 HR · 0 RBI · 0 H |
| #32 | Fernando Valenzuela | 2023 | 173-153 · 3.54 ERA · 2,074 K · 2,930 IP |
| #32 | Sandy Koufax (Hall of Fame) | 1972 | 165-87 · 2.76 ERA · 2,396 K · 2,324 IP |
| #34 | Fernando Valenzuela | — | 173-153 · 3.54 ERA · 2,074 K · 2,930 IP |
| #39 | Roy Campanella (Hall of Fame) | 1972 | 1,215 G · .276 AVG · 242 HR · 856 RBI · 1,161 H |
| #42 | Jackie Robinson (Hall of Fame) | 1972 | 1,382 G · .311 AVG · 137 HR · 734 RBI · 1,518 H |
| #53 | Don Drysdale (Hall of Fame) | 1984 | 209-166 · 2.95 ERA · 2,486 K · 3,432 IP |
Browse all Los Angeles Dodgers plaques →
Each plaque includes genuine licensed trading cards. The exact card may vary slightly from the one pictured; you'll always get a genuine licensed card of this player.


