REPORTING FROM PHOENIX — Dodgers legend Maury Wills expects this to be his final spring as an instructor with the club, he told The Times on Thursday.
Wills, 83, has yet to inform the Dodgers of his decision but said he was at peace with it.
"I'm a very spiritual person and I feel like I've received the message that it's about that time," Wills said.
Wills has spent nearly two decades — from Vero Beach, Fla., to Camelback Ranch in Arizona — teaching Dodgers players the finer points of bunting and base running.
The field he teaches on is aptly named Maury's Pit.
"I can't run like I used to, my body is not as alive as it used to be, but it is such a thrill teaching," he said. "Success is not to just keep for ourselves but to eventually pass it onto someone else and, in fact, giving it away is how you keep it."
Wills said he chose to play baseball after he saw the impact that Jackie Robinson made on the community Wills grew up in Washington, D.C.
The Dodgers signed him in 1951 and he spent nearly nine years in the minor leagues.
In 1960, he started his first full season as the Dodgers' shortstop and led the National League with 50 stolen bases.
Two years later, Wills was named the league's most valuable player after stealing 104 bases, breaking Ty Cobb's 47-year-old record.
He was a key player on Dodgers teams that won the World Series in 1963 and 1965, stealing 94 bases in 1965.