Monday Morning Cubs Show

Why Craig Counsell’s Anger Might Be Good News For The Cubs

47 min · Ayer
Portada del episodio Why Craig Counsell’s Anger Might Be Good News For The Cubs

Descripción

Something feels different with the Chicago Cubs right now, and it isn’t a single box score. It’s the heat. When Craig Counsell looks genuinely furious after a loss, when the frustration is visible and specific, it tells me the wins and losses are starting to matter in a sharper way again and that’s a big deal heading into the All-Star break and the MLB trade deadline. We talk through the Orioles series, the temptation to blame umpires, and why that’s a dead end when you score two runs. Then we get into what I actually care about: urgency, buy-in, and the hard truth that a lot of major league players become emotionally numb over time. I break down why a manager showing “breaking points” can be healthy, how clubhouse culture changes when losses sting, and why the edge isn’t always found in the cleanest spreadsheet comparison. From there, we look forward: what Jed Hoyer needs to do to upgrade the bullpen and add proven arms, what the Cubs should aim for in the final series before the break, and how we should be thinking about trade packages and real roster costs. I also get into a Cubs broadcast rant, what the best broadcasters have always done for fans, and why that matters more than people admit. If you’re watching this season closely and trying to figure out whether the Cubs are building toward something real, hit play. Subscribe, share the show with a Cubs fan, and leave a rating or review so more people can find us. Thanks for tuning in!  - Carl & Mahoney

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121 episodios

Portada del episodio Why Craig Counsell’s Anger Might Be Good News For The Cubs

Why Craig Counsell’s Anger Might Be Good News For The Cubs

Something feels different with the Chicago Cubs right now, and it isn’t a single box score. It’s the heat. When Craig Counsell looks genuinely furious after a loss, when the frustration is visible and specific, it tells me the wins and losses are starting to matter in a sharper way again and that’s a big deal heading into the All-Star break and the MLB trade deadline. We talk through the Orioles series, the temptation to blame umpires, and why that’s a dead end when you score two runs. Then we get into what I actually care about: urgency, buy-in, and the hard truth that a lot of major league players become emotionally numb over time. I break down why a manager showing “breaking points” can be healthy, how clubhouse culture changes when losses sting, and why the edge isn’t always found in the cleanest spreadsheet comparison. From there, we look forward: what Jed Hoyer needs to do to upgrade the bullpen and add proven arms, what the Cubs should aim for in the final series before the break, and how we should be thinking about trade packages and real roster costs. I also get into a Cubs broadcast rant, what the best broadcasters have always done for fans, and why that matters more than people admit. If you’re watching this season closely and trying to figure out whether the Cubs are building toward something real, hit play. Subscribe, share the show with a Cubs fan, and leave a rating or review so more people can find us. Thanks for tuning in!  - Carl & Mahoney

Ayer47 min
Portada del episodio Dansby Swanson’s Surge And The Cubs’ Second-Half Blueprint

Dansby Swanson’s Surge And The Cubs’ Second-Half Blueprint

A perfect Cubs week doesn’t exist, but this one comes close to capturing the whole experience: a monster win, a brutal loss, a Cardinals series that swings your mood every inning, and just enough momentum to make you believe again. We’re back on the Monday Morning Cubs Show after a July 4th break and a real-life disaster at home, then we get right into what actually matters for the second half: how good can this team be when the best version of its core shows up at the same time? Dansby Swanson is the heartbeat of the conversation. We break down the hottest two-week run you’ll see from any hitter, and the stat that makes it even stranger: eight home runs and 26 RBI over 51 plate appearances with zero walks. That turns into a deeper Cubs hitting discussion about approach, timing, and how pitchers were stealing easy early-count strikes against him earlier in the season. We also talk John Mallee, what “it clicked” can really mean for a veteran, and why Swanson’s high-end outcomes change the ceiling for the entire lineup. Then we zoom out to the standings, the All-Star break, and the trade deadline. We make the case for Pete Crow-Armstrong as the lone Cubs All-Star, why we love that he’s skipping the Home Run Derby, and what “Wild Card team” actually means when your starting pitching is hanging on. Finally, we wrestle with the big one: would you trade Matt Shaw to land an ace like Tarik Skubal if the goal is October baseball, not just chasing the Brewers? If you’re riding with the Cubs right now, subscribe, share the show with a fellow fan, and leave us a review so we can keep building this Monday routine together. Thanks for tuning in!  - Carl & Mahoney

6 de jul de 20261 h 1 min
Portada del episodio THE CUBS ARE BACK

THE CUBS ARE BACK

A road series in Milwaukee can either expose you or announce you, and the Cubs just delivered the kind of weekend that makes the division race feel alive again. We walk through how this team climbed out of a rough start to that soft stretch of the schedule, why the last 15 games matter more than any single headline, and how a gritty extra-inning win can change the whole tone of a clubhouse. If you’re tracking the NL Central standings and asking whether the Cubs are real contenders, this conversation is built for you.  Then we get into the stuff fans actually argue about: effort and leadership. We go all-in on the Alex Bregman baseline jog and why it hits a nerve when you’re paid like a centerpiece. It’s not about sprinting like you’re chasing a record, it’s about setting a standard in games decided by one bobble, one extra 90 feet, one moment of pressure.  From there it’s pure Cubs baseball analysis. We give Seiya Suzuki his flowers for the weekend’s biggest swings, break down what the Cubs offense seems built to do, and talk pitching realities. David Peterson’s debut leads into a wider trade-deadline lesson on why June deals take time, plus how a ground-ball starter fits better behind a top-tier Cubs defense. We also face the bullpen injury carousel head-on, shout out Jordan Wicks for a season-shifting moment, and preview the Padres and Cardinals at Wrigley as the first half closes.  If this gave you hope or fired you up, subscribe, share the show with a fellow Cubs fan, and leave a review so more Monday morning maniacs can find us. What’s your biggest takeaway from the Brewers series win? Thanks for tuning in!  - Carl & Mahoney

29 de jun de 202650 min
Portada del episodio Brewers Scouting Report + David Peterson Trade Breakdown

Brewers Scouting Report + David Peterson Trade Breakdown

The Cubs finally feel fun again, and the timing could not be more intense: three games in Milwaukee against a Brewers team that plays ruthless, disciplined baseball and runs out the kind of pitching that can erase your best plans by the second inning. We’re coming off a 10 and 4 stretch, the offense is cooking, and the fan base is right back on that knife edge between realism and belief. That’s exactly where a good season lives.  We talk through why this Brewers series matters so much, starting with what has actually changed for Chicago. Pete Crow Armstrong has turned the leadoff spot into gasoline, getting on base, creating pressure and looking more and more like a real superstar. At the same time, the Cubs rotation is in crisis: Justin Steele is not coming back, the injuries keep stacking, and the front office cannot afford to wish its way to innings. That context is why the David Peterson trade is worth a deeper look, including advanced pitching metrics like FIP, the role of ground balls, and why moving from the Mets defense to an elite Cubs defense could change his results fast.  Then we pivot to the opponent and the problem: Milwaukee wins without homers, scores a ton of runs anyway, and prevents runs with pitching, strikeouts and clean execution. We dig into what makes Pat Murphy’s group a machine, why Jacob Mizorowski’s triple digit fastball changes how you have to approach at bats, and what the Cubs must do to survive this weekend. If you like smart Cubs talk with real edge, subscribe, share the show with a friend, and leave a quick review on Apple Podcasts or Spotify. Thanks for tuning in!  - Carl & Mahoney

26 de jun de 20261 h 0 min
Portada del episodio The 2026 Cubs Can't Waste Pete Crow-Armonstrong

The 2026 Cubs Can't Waste Pete Crow-Armonstrong

A cycle can be a party trick, or it can be a signal flare. Pete Crow-Armstrong’s cycle at Wrigley Field sparks a bigger question for us: are the Chicago Cubs treating PCA like the engine of the team, or are they sleepwalking through the clearest franchise player moment they’ve had in years? We start with the emotional reality of being a Cubs fan right now. One night you see 16 runs and think the offense is turning a corner. The next night the bullpen melts down and the whole week feels fragile. That swing is why we dig into the Cubs’ identity struggle, why “just add another bat” can be a distraction, and why the pitching staff, especially the late innings, decides the team’s ceiling. We also talk about the value of raw postgame honesty, but why quotes do not save you when the same leaks keep happening. From there we get practical: Matt Shaw’s case for everyday reps, the roster math that makes Moises Ballesteros getting optioned make sense, and why a player like Justin Dean can matter when you only have a few bench spots to work with. We also put guardrails around the hope of injured arms returning, including Matthew Boyd, and explain why smaller moves like the Jaden Murray trade can quietly reveal how thin pitching depth really is. Finally, we preview the Mets series with a simple mindset: play clean, avoid late-inning disasters, and stack wins before Milwaukee. Subscribe for more Cubs talk, share the show with a fellow fan, and leave a rating and review if you want us to keep building these Monday mornings. What’s your biggest priority right now: bullpen help, a starter, or lineup stability? Thanks for tuning in!  - Carl & Mahoney

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