The Philadelphia Athletics dominated the first
fourteen years of the American League, winning six pennants through 1914
under the leadership of their founder and manager, Connie Mack. But
beginning in 1915, where volume 2 in Norman L. Macht's biography picks
up the story, Mack's teams fell from pennant winners to last place and,
in an unprecedented reversal of fortunes, stayed there for seven years.
World War I robbed baseball of young players, and Mack's rebuilding
efforts using green youngsters of limited ability made his teams the
objects of public ridicule.
At the age of fifty-nine and in the face
of widespread skepticism and seemingly insurmountable odds, Connie Mack
reasserted his genius, remade the A's, and rose again to the top, even
surpassing his earlier success. Baseball biographer and historian Macht
recreates what may be the most remarkable chapter in this
larger-than-life story. He shows us the man and his time and the game of
baseball in all its nitty-gritty glory of the 1920s, and how Connie
Mack built the 1929-1931 champions of Foxx, Simmons, Cochrane, Grove,
Earnshaw, Miller, Haas, Bishop, Dykes--a team many consider baseball's
greatest ever.
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