Connie Mack's '29 Triumph
The Rise and Fall of the Philadelphia Athletics Dynasty
By William C. Kashatus
224 pp. Photographs, maps, notes, appendices, bibliography, index
ISBN: 0-7864-0585-6 $28.50 hard cover 1999.
To order, click here or contact McFarland & Company, Inc., Jefferson, North Carolina, at (800) 253-2187.
It has been said that Connie Mack managed only two kinds of teams during his half-century in the City of Brotherly Love — unbeatable and lousy. His teams collected nine pennants and five World Series titles, balanced by 17 last place finishes. While Mack, an enterprising businessman, had a gift for discovering talented players and molding them into a team, by the time he was well into his sixties, Philadelphians suspected that the A’s skipper had lost his ability. Mack went on to disprove all doubts, however, with a second championship dynasty in 1929 that vindicated the “Tall Tactician.”
Connie Mack’s ’29 Triumph chronicles the rise and fall of the 1929 Philadelphia Athletics and their six-year rivalry with the New York Yankees, 1927 to 1932. Based on primarily on newspaper accounts, the book tells the story of the “Grand Old man of Baseball” — and the A’s team that is unfairly overlooked in favor of the 1927 Yankees as baseball’s greatest all-around team.
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