Goodreads helps you keep track of books you want to read.
Start by marking “Chumps to Champs: How the Worst Yankee Teams in History Became the Torre-Era Dynasty” as Want to Read:
Chumps to Champs: How the Worst Yankee Teams in History Became the Torre-Era Dynasty
by
The untold story of the time when the New York Yankees were a laughingstock—and how out of that abyss emerged the modern Yankees dynasty, one of the greatest in all of sports
Get A Copy
Hardcover, 288 pages
Published
May 7th 2019
by Houghton Mifflin Harcourt
Friend Reviews
To see what your friends thought of this book,
please sign up.
Reader Q&A
To ask other readers questions about
Chumps to Champs,
please sign up.
Be the first to ask a question about Chumps to Champs
This book is not yet featured on Listopia.
Add this book to your favorite list »
Community Reviews
Showing 1-30
Start your review of Chumps to Champs: How the Worst Yankee Teams in History Became the Torre-Era Dynasty
As I sit listening to the Cubs broadcast, the radio team is reflecting upon their 2016 World Series team. The school year is steamrolling to a close, and as a “jill of all trades” substitute, I have been as busy as the students as they complete their academic years. It is little wonder to me that I have been reading a heavy diet of sports-centric books and listening or watching at least one baseball game daily as my coping method for this heavy workload. The late 1990s were a half decade of dyna
...more
Chumps to Champs is a well-written chronicle of the transitional and transformational years from the bleak years in the late eighties when the Yankees were a three-ring circus and the worst team in the division until the championship years of the late nineties. After numerous manager firings, bitter intrigue, the trading away of all the minor league talent for over the hill past greats, and the suspension of Mr. Steinbrenner, Gene "the Stick" Michaels Buck Showalter, and the other super scouts r
...more
Bill Pennington describes his new book as a story of “resurrection and rebirth.” It is the story of a once proud dynasty, the envy of sports franchises worldwide, so why use the terms just mentioned. Pennington’s book, CHUMPS TO CHAMPS: HOW THE WORST TEAM IN YANKEE HISTORY LED TO THE 90S DYNASTY begins with a bad omen. Yankee pitcher, Andy Hawkins, a career journeyman who was about to be released pitches a no-hitter against the Chicago White Sox. However, an asterisk is called for because he los
...more
Believe it or not, there was a time – the early 1990’s to be precise – when the New York Yankees were among the worst teams in baseball. Star players who became free agents, such as Greg Maddux and Barry Bonds, turned down more money from the Yankees to sign with other teams. Attendance was plummeting. The owner and a star player were engaged in a conflict that led to the expulsion from baseball (rescinded after two years) of owner George Steinbrenner. How the team rose from those depths to beco
...more
Highly recommended book about an easily-forgotten period of Yankee baseball that laid the groundwork for the late-90s dynasty and the ensuing quarter-century of nonstop winning.
Yankees fans under 40, myself included, have known nothing but success since 1994 (the heartbreaking strike year), but things were quite different in the first years of the decade, when the team bottomed out and had the worst record in baseball. At the risk of being obvious, the primary reason for the Yankees' demise was ...more
Yankees fans under 40, myself included, have known nothing but success since 1994 (the heartbreaking strike year), but things were quite different in the first years of the decade, when the team bottomed out and had the worst record in baseball. At the risk of being obvious, the primary reason for the Yankees' demise was ...more
Although the Yankees get plenty of ink Bill Pennington has mined a nice little era where not much has been written but plenty happened. The stars of this book are Gene Michael the longtime Yankee player and exec who becomes general manager as Steinbrenner is headed to exile and Buck Showalter the young manager that nurtured the young talent that would go on to win 4 world series. The book starts in the period when George Steinbrenner had run the team into the ground with his short term thinking.
...more
Terrific baseball book about the history of the NYY in the early 90's and how they spent time as a lousy team but were able to build a foundation that generated the last great dynasty on the 20th century. Well written, informative and a great true story.
...more
Veteran baseball writer Bill Pennington has delivered another hit with his 2019 release Chumps to Champs.
Pennington, author of an outstanding 2015 biography on Billy Martin, has turned his considerable talents towards an overlooked period in New York Yankees history, the early to mid 1990s.
In 1990 the Yankees were the worst team in baseball, compiling the worst record in the major leagues and finding embarrassment in new and unusual ways. To cap it all off, mercurial owner George Steinbrenner w ...more
Pennington, author of an outstanding 2015 biography on Billy Martin, has turned his considerable talents towards an overlooked period in New York Yankees history, the early to mid 1990s.
In 1990 the Yankees were the worst team in baseball, compiling the worst record in the major leagues and finding embarrassment in new and unusual ways. To cap it all off, mercurial owner George Steinbrenner w ...more
Baseball tends to be a sport that features competitive ebbs and flows from its teams. Some years are great and bring championship aspirations, while other years (even for the same franchise) might be competitively over by Memorial Day. The New York Yankees would seem to be the exception to that rule, but in “Chumps to Champs” author Bill Pennington recounts how the Bronx’s darkest baseball period led to one of its greatest triumphs.
From the 1920s through the early 1980s, the Yankees were never f ...more
From the 1920s through the early 1980s, the Yankees were never f ...more
Mr. Pennington takes you back in time when the Yankees were not the place to be. Not only was their owner banned from the game, but free agents also did not want to come and play in New York either. Some like Greg Maddox was offered more money by the Yankees but signed with the Braves. Who could blame him? I remember going to a Yankee game in the old stadium in the early ’90s and for the most part, it was not packed. By the end of the ’90s and into the 2000’s it was difficult to get a ticket to
...more
The New York Yankees win World Series on an average of every four years. The team's 27 titles are the epitome of the baseball dynasty. Yet, there was a period from the late 1970s to the mid 1990s that the Yanks had abysmal years. Looking at the standings in, say 1990, and seeing them in last place in the American League East was a bit different.
Bill Pennington, author of the outstanding biography on Billy Martin, looks at that poor era and suggests, like others, that the Yankees' owner George St ...more
Bill Pennington, author of the outstanding biography on Billy Martin, looks at that poor era and suggests, like others, that the Yankees' owner George St ...more
5 stars for anyone with an interest in the behind closed doors dealings of Baseball. Pennington lays out in clear detail and lucid prose some of the darkest years of my Yankee fandom and how a brain trust fronted by Gene Michael and his crack staff slowly but surely rebuilt the team while George had exiled himself.
Pennington brilliantly weaves the reader through the years 1989-1996, where from 1989-1992 the Yankees were the laughingstock of Baseball. Couple this with Steinbrenner being banished ...more
Pennington brilliantly weaves the reader through the years 1989-1996, where from 1989-1992 the Yankees were the laughingstock of Baseball. Couple this with Steinbrenner being banished ...more
This book addresses the period right before the New York Yankees’ time of success from the late 1990’s to early part of the 2000’s. The book discusses how Gene Michael, Bucky Showalter helped develop the Yankees by making good personnel decisions. The team held on to their good prospects who would help them get better. The book chronicles the development of Jorge Pasada, Derek Jeter, Mariano Rivera, Andy Pettite and Bernie Williams.
The book also discusses the 13 managerial changes that George St ...more
The book also discusses the 13 managerial changes that George St ...more
If you were a baseball in the 1990s whether you like them or not, The Yankees dominated the sport. This is a very listen covering the Yankees rise from the bottom of the league at the starts of the dynasty to the last great dynasty in baseball by the end of the decade. Most of the book is concentrated on the first half of the 90’s with the book ending on the Yankees World Series victory in 1996.
The author was a beat writer for the team, so he was their through it all, and also was able to conta ...more
The author was a beat writer for the team, so he was their through it all, and also was able to conta ...more
Pennington was a Yankees beat writer for years and has produced a fun account of the Yankees during the period that I lived in New York (1990-1996). This period contained the lowest of lows (worst team in baseball, #1 overall draft pick injuring his arm in a bar fight and ending his career) and the highest of highs (the beginning of the youth movement that would win consistently with great team spirit).
Pennington's source material was perfect for me, but I might have wished for a more insightful ...more
Pennington's source material was perfect for me, but I might have wished for a more insightful ...more
Even as an avowed, passionate Y*nkee hater, this book offered a lot. It's a fascinating history of the team at one of its lowest ebbs...unfortunately, Pennington builds up from there to the championship teams of the late 90's. Alas, we can't change history.
One truly fascinating element here is the portrait of George Steinbrenner. He truly was a Tr*mp-like figure, and it very nearly cost him his baseball team. Insert your own political commentary here, but I'll just go ahead and say that I don't ...more
One truly fascinating element here is the portrait of George Steinbrenner. He truly was a Tr*mp-like figure, and it very nearly cost him his baseball team. Insert your own political commentary here, but I'll just go ahead and say that I don't ...more
Pennington has done it again. His book on Billy Martin would be tough to match, but this account of the 80s/90s Yankees journey from Chumps to Champs checks all the boxes for a great read. Rich with context and new stories this account provides wonderful entertainment. The book was masterful in weaving the themes of revival, ingenuity, and perseverance in adversity throughout the personal stories. And any book on these group of Yankees must contain stories of George Steinbrenner - this book did
...more
This one brought be back to my teenage years as a Yankees fan. I was a pretty massive fan - but only 10 in 1990 - so while the narrative re: on-the-field was fun to relive, I never had a handle on the off-the-field events. It was an eventful, well-written story that brought a whole new light to the 1990 - 1996 teams that I followed as well as any other teenage kid without an internet addiction could. Ranks as the best Yankees-related book I've read since the dynasty actually happened. Kudos to M
...more
Good grief. That took way too long to read, because I was only reading it out loud when James and I both had a minute to engage in it. It was a fantastic book, we both really enjoyed it in this season of Covid baseball drought. Well written, although I noticed the writing in the final few chapters lacked some of its original luster. It was a fun story to read, and it meant a lot to James to reflect on the Yankees he grew up with with.
Amazing look at how the Yankees were built in the early 90s
Growing up in the 80’s in NYC I lived and died with the Yankees, and wold do anything g to see them win the World Series. Thanks to gene Michael I got to finally see it happen six months after college graduation. This book is a look back at how the Yankees went from last to first during the early to mid 90’s. A must read for any baseball fan
Growing up in the 80’s in NYC I lived and died with the Yankees, and wold do anything g to see them win the World Series. Thanks to gene Michael I got to finally see it happen six months after college graduation. This book is a look back at how the Yankees went from last to first during the early to mid 90’s. A must read for any baseball fan
As someone who became a fan during the dark years of Yankee baseball, Chumps to Champs is a walk down memory lane. The people, stories, and games conjured up so many childhood memories and events that I associate with various Yankee moments. As you would expect, I thoroughly enjoyed Bill Pennington's book. I highly recommend it for any Yankee fan.
...more
I hate the Yankees. Mostly because they are winners. I guess it's something like those that hate the Dallas Cowboys. Yet this book was good. Really good. It is well written and tells the story through good times and bad. In fact, the bad times were hard to read through because I felt myself rooting on the Yankees. Image that!
...more
Truly fascinating look into the inner workings of how the Yankees built their 90s dynasty from the ashes of possibly some of the worst Yankees teams in history. I loved Pennington's book on Billy Martin and that love continues to this book.
...more
I really enjoyed this read. I've been a Yankee's fan since I was a child, which was during the 90's, and Jeter has been part of that for most of that time. Definitely a great book for Yankee fans, baseball fans, and any sports fan, casual or die-hard.
...more
As someone who grew up hating the Yankees I went into this book with low expectations and for the first part of the book that's what I got. However, as the book went along Pennington did a good enough job telling the human side of the story that you could enjoy it even if you aren't a Yankees fan.
...more
There are no discussion topics on this book yet.
Be the first to start one »
Bill Pennington writes the "On Par" column and stars in the related video series on www.nytimes.com. Pennington, who covers a number of sports in addition to golf, joined the New York Times in 1997 from the Bergen Record, where he was a sports columnist. A six-time winner of the Associated Press Sports Editor’s writing award, Pennington has also written for the New York Times Magazine, Sports Illu
...more
Related Articles
Here in the United States, it's football season. It's time of great rivalry, wearing of team colors, and obsessing over the...
10 likes · 11 comments
No trivia or quizzes yet. Add some now »










