Your comment about us not caring about winning was a bit out of line, IMO.
I get your point. We'd have many more wins, had we been able to cut our blown saves in half, without adding losses elsewhere by removing a good pitcher from his previous role/slot.
Once we started the season with the roster we had, there was little hope of adding a closer from outside the system. It had to come from the minors or from a pitcher already being used in another role.
I think the vast majority of us feel Cora should have tried Houck or Whitlock or even both at closer, at some point, this season, so far. It may or may not have worked. Even if it worked, we may have lost as much from the role they vacated as we gained in the role they switched to.
It obvious, the plan did has not worked, so far. The Sale injury, the continued troubles from Barnes, Robles and others counted on to do better than they have all hurt the plan. I never liked the Diekman signing from the start. I guess Strahm and the Scheiber call up moved cancel out some of the bad choices, but pen choices are always pretty much a shot in the dark. That's not meant to defend Cora or Bloom, but many felt the exact same way about the pen, last year, and it seemed like it worked way more often than it didn't, despite Ottavino being pretty much a flop, and Andriese barely making it half way through the season.
Maybe, something happens, this year, like last year. Maybe a deadline move or two helps as much or more than Robles & Davis did, last year. Maybe the return of Sale and or Paxton allows us to move a starter into a key relief role, and they'll do even better than Richards did in relief, last year. It's hard to know or predict.
I'm not sure anyone felt good about our pen going into the season, but with a limited winter spending budget, Bloom chose to spend in other areas. I scratched my head at some of his moves and signings, and I realize no GM is perfect, but I still like the overall direction Bloom is taking us, and I still think Cora gets the most out of most of our players, most of the time. I disagree, often enough, but I still am glad we have both. No, they don't walk on water, and do occasionally step in muddy puddles.