Cubs’ Craig Counsell takes it in stride as Brewers fans boo their former manager’s return to Milwaukee
MILWAUKEE â If you didnât know, you would have thought the dozens of media members assembled in the visitors dugout at American Family Field were there for the likes of Shohei Ohtani. But the pomp and circumstance was for former Brewers, and now Cubs manager, Craig Counsell making his return to Milwaukee for the first time since taking his new job in Chicago.
After downplaying his return and the attention that would surround it for the last month, the Cubs manager opened up his trip back to the ballpark that he called home for nearly two decades.
âLife takes different turns, man,â Counsell said before the Cubsâ 5-1 loss to the Brewers. âI don’t want to plan out my life forever. I want to do things that challenge me. That excites me, so I don’t make plans like that. You gotta take the ride of life and see what happens. This was not something I necessarily expected to happen. But you got to jump on the ride and go.
âI was at a place for a long time. I think when you’re at a place for a long time, you just naturally think about like, âWhat if I did something different?ââ Counsell said. âThat was part of it. And that happened over the last couple of years. Not just last year. Frankly, [former Brewers president of baseball operations] David Stearns leaving made you think about it a lot. I donât know how it couldnât. So it happens over time.â
Chicago Cubs manager Craig Counsell talks to reporters before Monday’s game in Milwaukee, where he spent parts of 18 years as a player, manager and other roles with the Brewers. (AP Photo/Morry Gash)
While any manager returning to a place theyâve been for a long time gets attention, Counsellâs return to Milwaukee is probably even bigger for Counsell than it would have been for others. Itâs not just that he managed in Milwaukee for nine seasons, played there for six seasons as a player and worked in the front office for three seasons.
Itâs the fact that Counsell also happens to be one of Wisconsinâs native sons.
The Cubsâ skipper grew up just 15 minutes away from American Family Field in Whitefish Bay. The park in Whitefish Bay named after Counsell was vandalized in the offseason after he was hired by Chicago.
Counsell seems to realize how his departure from Milwaukee and move to Chicago has been taken by the fan base that used to cheer for him. He brushed their new disdain for him in expectation of his response.
Brewers fans wasted no time âwelcomingâ their former manager back with a round of boos during his brief tribute video and when he walked out to exchange lineup cards with Brewers manager and longtime friend Pat Murphy or when he walked out onto the field at any time during the Cubsâ loss to the Brewers on Monday.
âCheer, boo, whatever, man. Just have a good time at the game,â Counsell said before the game. âThat’s what fans get to do. So just have a good time. It’s Memorial Day, you don’t go to work today. And let’s all have a good time.â
While the fans of Milwaukee currently have no love lost for Counsell, Murphy knows what both mean to each other despite the changes over the past seven months.
âWe have passionate fans. I mean that’s something I’ve come to know,â Murphy said. âI was here for almost every game Craig managed. And I know how much [Brewers fans] respect him. I know how much the Brewers accomplished when Craig was the manager. And I think when he walks out, he’s expecting anything. ⊠I know at the end of the day, 20 years from now when we all look back on this, Craig will be recognized as a big part of the Brewers.â
â[Craig] would do anything for this community. That’s how he is.â
Counsellâs tenure in Milwaukee was highly successful, going 707-625 under his charge with five postseason appearances. Following a disappointing sweep by Arizona in the NL wild card last season, Counsellâs contract expired in November, making him a free agent for the first time.
In a move that shocked the baseball world, the Cubs hired Counsell away from their NL Central rivals five days later while also firing David Ross in the process.
If Counsell left Milwaukee for any other team in baseball, the public response would almost certainly be different. Choosing Chicago gives a lengthy relationship between Counsell and Milwaukee even more chapters.
âIt’s not my job to tell people how to feel about it or even to figure it out,â Counsell said. âLet people feel how they want to feel, and I’m good with it. And it doesn’t have to be all positive. We’re in a public job. And we’re in a job with fans and fans are allowed to feel whatever they want.â
Unlike other sports, because of the nature of baseball and the fact that there are games nearly every day over seven months, it doesnât often allow for sentimentality. In a series between two teams at the top of the division, with the first-place Brewers playing well and the Cubs not, it can almost be easier for those involved to not feel.
Counsell, who has always been known for his stoic, business-like manner, rarely shows much emotion and that fits his personality. But in a way, the Cubsâ manager seemed almost relieved the day had come to get some sense of closure and attempt to enjoy the moment in the process.
âWhen you see people and you talk to people, that’s what makes you reflect and enjoy,â Counsell said. âThat happened when we were in Chicago with those guys and that’ll happen here this week in Milwaukee with more people that weren’t in Chicago.
âSo I hope to do that and want to do that. That’s going to be fun. So I’m looking forward to doing that. And that’s certainly the human part of it, but it’s because of your connections with people.â