"He was a humble man who had the interests of the game at heart," Rogers said.
"He always wanted to contribute back to the game and back to the community, and I think you could see that through the contribution that he made in the various ways, he was always prepared to try and help, roll up his sleeves and get involved."
"He was genuinely a good person, and he'll be sorely missed."
Rogers said Dodge, a well-respected and welcoming man, was at the forefront of club rugby, making decisions that would benefit the game and would remember him as someone with a wealth of knowledge.
"He was always there when you needed him.
"My lasting memory of him was it was always in the best interest of the game and the players and the club and the community, certainly he was a very selfless person who always gave for the game."
Fellow Tauranga Sports Rugby Club Life Member Graeme Moore has known Dodge for more than 30 years, describing him as the "guiding light" and "largely responsible" for the successful amalgamation of the Tauranga Old Boys and Otumoetai Cadets in 1988 which established Tauranga Sports Club Inc.
Moore, who was the president of the Cadets at the time, says it was when he took a proposal of amalgamation to Tauranga Old Boys in 1987/88 that he was first introduced to Dodge, spending many months together, along with others, formulating a plan.
"Bruce's administrative skills, calm manner and knowledge of all things rugby were apparent from the start," Moore says.
"There were other strong contributors, but for me, he was the guiding light of those negotiations and largely responsible for the hugely successful outcome," he says.
He says it was a proud moment for his "old friend" when Dodge's grandson Kaden began playing senior level rugby for the club "his granddad was so instrumental in establishing".
"Bruce has joined his beloved Helen after a lifetime of challenge and achievement."
The first time fellow Tauranga Sports Club life member Max Heimann met Dodge was about 50 years ago when Bay of Plenty played Poverty Bay in the East Coast in the 60s.
Heimann was a visiting player, and Dodge was involved with the Poverty Bay Rugby Union, and even though the players and administration didn't often mix, he remembers Dodge introducing him to crayfish.
He says Dodge served both the Bay of Plenty and Poverty Bay very well.
BRUCE DODGE:
1970:
Assisted with the formation of an 'Old Boys Easter Tournament' between Old Boys clubs from Gisborne, Tauranga, Hastings and Te Aroha
1977:
Poverty Bay Rugby Union chairman
1978:
Arrived in Tauranga from Gisborne aged 43
1981-1988:
Tauranga Old Boys Committee
1984–1994:
Delegate for Tauranga Old Boys and Tauranga Sports on the Tauranga and Western Bay of Plenty Sub Unions
1985-1989:
Inter–City Rugby Committee
1989:
Inter–City Rugby chairman
1989-1992:
Tauranga Sports Committee, when Old Boys amalgamated with Cadets
1989-1994:
Bay of Plenty Rugby Management Committee
1990-1994:
Western Bay of Plenty Sub Union chairman
1990-2003:
Baywide Competition Committee
1990-1991:
Union delegate to the NZRU Annual General Meeting
1993-1994:
Bay of Plenty Rugby Management Finance Committee chairman
1997-2003:
Western Bay of Plenty Board of Delegates
1999-2003:
Western Bay of Plenty Board of Delegates chairman
2002-2014:
Produced all Baywide Senior Rugby draws together with Western Bay of Plenty club rugby draws
2003:
Life Member of Tauranga Sports Rugby Club
2004:
Life Member of Western Bay of Plenty Sub-Union
2006:
Bay of Plenty Rugby Union vice president
2007-2008:
Bay of Plenty Rugby Union president
2016:
Life Member of Bay of Plenty Rugby Union