CHICAGO — As a new MLB season looms and expectations swirl around Wrigleyville like a restless wind off Lake Michigan, Chicago Cubs manager Craig Counsell has finally spoken — and his words carry both the weight of past disappointment and the fire of unfinished business.
After a season that fell short of postseason glory, questions have followed the Cubs into spring. Critics have pointed to inconsistency. Analysts have debated roster construction. Fans, loyal yet impatient, have demanded more. And in the middle of it all stands Counsell — calm, reflective, but unmistakably determined.
“This city deserves a winner,” Counsell said quietly during a recent media session. “We didn’t reach the standard we set for ourselves last year. That’s on me. But failure, if you’re honest with it, can become your greatest teacher.”
It was not a defensive response. It was not a deflection. It was accountability — the kind rarely delivered so plainly in professional sports.
Managing the Chicago Cubs is unlike managing anywhere else in baseball. The ivy-covered walls of Wrigley Field are not just picturesque — they are historic, sacred, and unforgiving. Every loss echoes. Every missed opportunity lingers.
Counsell understood that when he accepted the job. A respected baseball mind known for discipline and preparation, he arrived with the reputation of a steady hand. Yet steadiness alone does not quiet October dreams.

Last season’s shortcomings still hang in the air. The Cubs flashed brilliance at times — dominant pitching stretches, explosive offensive bursts — but inconsistency proved costly. The postseason remained out of reach, and the frustration was palpable.
Counsell does not shy away from it.
“You can’t pretend it didn’t hurt,” he admitted. “Our players felt it. The fans felt it. I felt it. But pain can either divide you or sharpen you. We chose to let it sharpen us.”
In his remarks, Counsell repeatedly returned to one theme: growth through adversity.
“In baseball, you fail a lot,” he said. “Great hitters fail seven out of ten times and are still considered elite. As a team, we have to understand that setbacks are part of the process — but repeating the same mistakes is not.”
He spoke of situational awareness, of late-game execution, of mental discipline. These were not abstract ideas. They were precise, deliberate points of emphasis for a clubhouse seeking identity.
Sources within the organization describe a spring training environment that feels more focused than frantic. Practices have been sharper. Meetings more intentional. Accountability more visible.

Counsell’s message has been consistent: own the past, but do not be defined by it.
If there was one moment that shifted the tone from reflective to emotional, it came when Counsell spoke about Cubs fans.
“You walk into Wrigley after a tough stretch, and the stands are still full,” he said, pausing. “They still believe. That kind of loyalty — you don’t take it for granted. It’s powerful.”
Chicago’s fan base is often described as patient, but that patience is born from passion. Generations have lived and breathed Cubs baseball. They celebrate fiercely. They endure heartbreak deeply.
Counsell understands that.
“The fans are not just spectators. They’re part of this organization’s heartbeat,” he said. “When they show up after disappointment, it tells our players something — that quitting isn’t an option.”
Those words resonated far beyond the clubhouse walls. Social media lit up with supporters echoing his sentiment, reaffirming their belief in the team’s direction.
Internally, there is cautious optimism. Young talent is maturing. Veterans are embracing leadership roles. The front office has signaled confidence in the current core.
But optimism alone wins nothing.
Counsell’s approach is rooted in preparation and culture. He has emphasized communication, resilience, and clarity of roles. Players have described a more unified atmosphere — less reactive, more purposeful.
“We don’t need to chase noise,” Counsell said. “We need to chase execution. If we handle our details, the results will follow.”
There was no grand promise of dominance. No bold guarantee of division titles. Instead, there was something more powerful: conviction without arrogance.
When asked directly about the mounting pressure entering the new season, Counsell offered a perspective that reframed the narrative entirely.
“Pressure means people care,” he said. “If nobody expected anything from you, that’s when you should worry. In Chicago, expectations are high because the standard is high. That’s a privilege.”

It was a statement that captured the delicate balance he must maintain — shielding his players from distraction while embracing the urgency that fuels elite performance.
In many ways, this season will define more than just the standings. It will test leadership. It will test belief. It will test whether lessons learned in defeat can truly translate into sustained excellence.
As Opening Day approaches, uncertainty lingers — as it always does in baseball. Injuries, slumps, surprises — the season will write its own unpredictable script.
But one thing is clear: Craig Counsell is not running from the past. He is using it.
“We’re not here to rewrite history,” he said in closing. “We’re here to create a better next chapter.”
For a franchise rich in tradition and a fan base unwavering in loyalty, that next chapter carries enormous meaning.
And if Counsell’s words are any indication, the Cubs are entering it not burdened by last season’s disappointment — but strengthened by it.
The ivy is ready. The crowd will roar. And under the bright Chicago sky, a manager who has faced failure head-on now stands determined to turn belief into breakthrough.