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An aura of intrigue surrounds a baseball coach obsessed with the idea of turning a bunch of handpicked beginners into champions in one season.Tags
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Christopher, Matt. The diamond champs. (1977). Boston: Little, Brown and Company
Inexplicably, Coach Stag Gorman puts together a rag-tag baseball team made up of kids who are inexperienced and not suited for their positions. No one knows him, but he called each player and talked them into being on the team. His confidence in the players and ever optimistic attitude wins the players over. Despite the odds, they end up winning the league championship. During the season it had become increasingly clear to some of the players that winning the championship was crucially important to Coach Stag. Kim Rollins, the left fielder, wants to figure out who Coach is and why he has put together such an unlikely team to win the championship. He finds show more out that Coach was on the team all his players’ dads had been on when they were Kim’s age. Coach, who is really Gates Morgan, was only allowed to be the equipment handler on the team because of his poor eyesight. He put this team together to prove to himself that he was capable of taking a team to the championship.
This is a satisfying realistic fiction sports story that will appeal to middle and upper elementary students. The story is told from Kim’s point of view, and he quite believably questions Coach’s mysterious ways. The play-by-play narration of each of the baseball games makes the story feel true-to-life to kids, as does the slow progression from a losing team to a winning team. The characters have self-doubt, as one would expect from kids that are playing in positions that don’t suit their strength and kids that are playing a sport they’re not used to playing. Just as realistically, they respond well to Coach’s encouragement. The issue that is central to this story is a common and important one that kids face – being held back when others see a lack of ability or even a real disability. The story shows kids that they can always do their best, no matter what their circumstances are. show less
Inexplicably, Coach Stag Gorman puts together a rag-tag baseball team made up of kids who are inexperienced and not suited for their positions. No one knows him, but he called each player and talked them into being on the team. His confidence in the players and ever optimistic attitude wins the players over. Despite the odds, they end up winning the league championship. During the season it had become increasingly clear to some of the players that winning the championship was crucially important to Coach Stag. Kim Rollins, the left fielder, wants to figure out who Coach is and why he has put together such an unlikely team to win the championship. He finds show more out that Coach was on the team all his players’ dads had been on when they were Kim’s age. Coach, who is really Gates Morgan, was only allowed to be the equipment handler on the team because of his poor eyesight. He put this team together to prove to himself that he was capable of taking a team to the championship.
This is a satisfying realistic fiction sports story that will appeal to middle and upper elementary students. The story is told from Kim’s point of view, and he quite believably questions Coach’s mysterious ways. The play-by-play narration of each of the baseball games makes the story feel true-to-life to kids, as does the slow progression from a losing team to a winning team. The characters have self-doubt, as one would expect from kids that are playing in positions that don’t suit their strength and kids that are playing a sport they’re not used to playing. Just as realistically, they respond well to Coach’s encouragement. The issue that is central to this story is a common and important one that kids face – being held back when others see a lack of ability or even a real disability. The story shows kids that they can always do their best, no matter what their circumstances are. show less
Kim Rollins hasn't played much baseball, and he is surprised when Coach Stag insists that he join his team, a team the coach believes will win the championship. Kim is even more intrigued when he discovers everyone else on the team is new at the sport. Who is this Coach Stag? And why is he so set on winning the championship - with inexperienced players to boot? Tensions build as the season progresses and Kim tries to find the answers in this exciting sports story with an unexpected twist.
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257+ Works 29,950 Members
Matt Christopher was born August 16, 1917 in Bath, Pennsylvania. He had a variety of odd jobs before focusing full time on writing including playing shortstop for a Class C minor-league team in Smith Falls, Ontario. He also drove trucks and sold umbrellas and worked in a theater. Christopher finally began his writing career in 1940, when he wrote show more a detective story that was accepted by Detective Box Magazine in 1943 His first children's book was The Lucky Baseball Bat, published in 1954, which was in print for 25 years. Christopher was the best-selling author of more than fifty sports books for young readers. He is best known for his sports novels for children as well as his many short stories and articles in numerous children's and adults' magazines. His later works include Dirt Bike Racer, The Spy on Third Base, and Skateboard Tough. Christopher wrote 78 books in all and over 250 magazine articles and short stories. Matt Christopher dies in 1997. (Bowker Author Biography) show less
Series
Common Knowledge
- Canonical title
- The Diamond Champs
- People/Characters
- Coach Gorman E. Stag; Kim Rollins
- Important places
- Blue Hills
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- Members
- 248
- Popularity
- 130,597
- Reviews
- 3
- Rating
- (3.83)
- Languages
- English
- Media
- Paper, Ebook
- ISBNs
- 10
- ASINs
- 3



























































