This is revealing, because a lot of what makes Counsell perceived to be a good manager are things that have nothing to do with him, namely having multiple excellent starters who can go deep into games and one of the best closers in baseball. It's not a coincidence that when Ross has those things the yelling about him goes down to a minimum because they're winning games. From the time Alzolay started closing more or less full time until his week off prior to the dead cat bounce and his DL stint, the Cubs were 45-26, a near half season at 102 win pace. And that includes periods with injuries to Bellinger, Swanson, and Stroman so it was far from an ideal roster window aside from simply having closer settled. Conversely, the Brewers muddled around .500 without Woodruff and have only played like an excellent team with him, Burnes, and Peralta pitching excellently and consistently 6+ innings, with Williams serving as the back end foundation.
About 5 weeks ago, the Cubs were 1 game out of a wild card spot, and since then, they've sustained injuries to Stroman, Alzolay, Fulmer, Candelario, and Madrigal (and those are the ones we know about requiring IL stints). Leiter lost his splitter, Steele has hit a wall and had multiple disaster starts, and there haven't been more than 2 or so hitters swinging well at any given time. And they had to play 40 games in 22 days or whatever it was. Their playoff position has improved by a game. But I'm supposed to believe the real reason the Cubs would have missed the playoffs is that Ross didn't sequence the batting order quite right, or didn't play PCA(0/9 w/ 5 Ks despite protected matchups) enough, or didn't do...something different with the bullpen despite being starved for worthy options? Lunacy. The Cubs are an average team and their record reflects their averageness. Yes it's frustrating that they've swung between white hot and ice cold, but as tempting as it can be to think that's a dial the manager can turn, it's really not when you consider the causes(pitching injuries & fatigue, teamwide RISP slumps). Sometimes the other team plays well, and sometimes the circumstances are not in your control to improve enough to change game outcomes.