Jameson Taillon's latest comments add to the diminishing feeling of Cubs' baseball
Craig Counsell did not hold back last week when he was asked about where the gap is between the Chicago Cubs and Milwaukee Brewers. He mentioned how the Cubs should be building 90-win teams, unlike the .500-ish teams of the past two seasons. It was a clear expression of needing better team construction. Counsell is not the only one to make comments like this.
After Friday afternoon's 3-1 win against the Nationals, pitcher Jameson Taillon also expressed his desire to strive for better.
Teams shouldn't want to come in here and play the Cubs. Wrigley shouldn't be a fun road trip - They should come in here and say like, we're going to get worked for three days - I think as players that's something we should strive for - We’re the Chicago Cubs. We should strive to be a 90-win — at least — organization.
There again is the use of the "90-win team" goal. This plays so well with fan's frustrations over a front office that seemingly is okay with winning 85-some games just so they can "get into" the postseason. President of Baseball Operations Jed Hoyer basically ran back an 83-win team, hoping a few additions in Shota Imanaga and Michael Busch (who have both been very good to their credit) and adding Counsell as the manager would boost them just enough to reach that goal.
"We're the Chicago Cubs." That line is exactly what fans and Chicago media have been saying during this whole process. This is a major market team with its own broadcast station, national fanbase, a classic ballpark that fills up no matter what, and a neighborhood of entertainment. The days of Lovable Losers are supposed to be long gone. Don't strive to be "just good enough", strive to be the best. Counsell wants it, Taillon wants it, everyone wants it. Hoyer and owner Tom Ricketts have to see this.
This is not just about spending money, their payroll is among the top 10 in baseball as they are dealing at the first threshold of the luxury tax. It's about the quality of work and investing in the right pieces in the right places. Whether it's ignoring holes in the lineup, ending up with just over $16 million in dead money to players who have not even played for your team this year, or not bulletproofing a bullpen that cost you games early.
The Cubs are not a bad team, but they are not just good enough to win anything meaningful. Pure and simple. There are some good players on this roster, but without a star and a reliable bullpen, then you are looking at mediocre .500 records. Hoyer will probably be a lame duck and working for his job this offseason, and everything has to be taken seriously. Even when you inevitably don't land Juan Soto. Raise. Your. Bar.