That's not Lovie.On Sunday, after yet another Bears’ loss that fell just short of a kick in our collective nuts, the Associated Press ran this photo and this caption.

“Chicago Bears coach Lovie Smith walks off the field after the Bears’ 20-10 loss to the Cleveland Browns on Sunday, Oct. 9, 2005, in Cleveland. The Bears led late in the game, but two touchdown passes by Browns quarterback Trent Dilfer to Antonio Bryant in the closing minutes gave Cleveland its first home win of the season. (AP Photo/Mark Duncan)”

Losing can change a man. But not that much. I’m sure there are times that Lovie wishes he were running backs coach Tim Spencer, but that doesn’t make it so.

I missed the Bears’ game on Sunday, well, part of it anyway. I was on the road to Indianapolis listening to Jeff Joniak and Tom Thayer which means, I have no idea what happened, I just know it was bad. Something about the Bears not only blowing their 10-6 fourth quarter lead but blowing it so hard that they lost by 10 points. All I heard was Joniak screeching in that voice that must drive dogs to suicide and Thayer pretending we give a damn about offensive line play over and over and over again. The only time we care is when they do something stupid like give up a sack or get a holding penalty that brings back a touchdown. So unless you’re going to blame one of them for something, nobody gives a rat’s ass.

About the same time, in Houston, former Cubs’ underachieving flamethrower/manwhore, Kyle Farnsworth was coming in to game four of the NLDS to stop an eighth inning Astros rally. No big deal, the Farns had a five run lead to work with. Unless he gave up a grand slam, there was no way the Astros were coming back.

Oops.

Even after Fat Lance hit his grand slam, the Farns still had a lead and was still pitching to a pop-gun Astros offense. Who’s gonna get him at the bottom of the order in the ninth? Brad Ausmus? Hah! Never gonna happen. It’s not like he’s going to homer to one of the deepest parts of the park, or anything.

Oops.

On Sunday, before I left I was talking to my dad and he was lamenting the fact that the Cubs got “nothing” for the Farns and that he was now closing in Atlanta and how he just knew that it was another Cubs’ dud who was going to blossom someplace else. I just assured dad that Kyle was too dumb to haunt the Cubs that way. The only way the trade was going to hurt the Cubs was if Kyle was pitching against a team that the Cubs needed to lose.

Three hours later, Kyle was proving me right on both counts.

Yesterday, on the way back I was stuck listening to Mike Murphy give a “true Sox fans” quiz. Murph thought that unless you could answer the questions, you should not be allowed into US Cellular for game one of the ALCS. There’s a problem with this. The true Sox fans are the ones who show up all the time. It’s why two thirds of the park is empty most of the time. Sometimes more, like on half-price night or if the guys bring their parole officers.

I knew most of the questions:

Who scored the winning run when the Sox clinched the division in 1983?
Easy, it was Julio Cruz.

Who drove him in?
Harold Baines

What former Sox reliever was discovered while playing softball?
Kevin Hickey

How long was the longest game, who ended it and who was it against?
Twenty-five innings, Harold Baines, the Brewers.

A Cubs’ fan snuck in to bring up Tito Landrum, and there was stuff about Jim Landis and Jungle Jim Rivera and it went on and on.

It made me realize how dumb it is to root against the White Sox in the playoffs. How insecure and immature it is to root for a team from our beloved Chicago. Do we really want some team from LA to go to another World Series?

Well, yes, we do. I don’t care if it’s dumb, or insecure or immature. It is what it is. We root against them, they root against us, it’s what makes the world go around.

The mere fact that Chicago baseball fans know a lot about both teams doesn’t mean they root for both of them.

The Sox can win a pennant and a World Series and I won’t care. But that won’t happen until after the Cubs get to do it first.

Until then, we’ll have nights like last night when the Sox Cubs-like inability to get down a bunt or hit a salad-tosser like Paul Byrd isn’t tragic, it’s hilarious.

Besides, it’s not like Sox players are diving into Boston Harbor to save drowning ladies, are they?

Nomar would have gotten there sooner but he had to back away from the ledge to adjust his batting gloves before he could jump in.

So let me get this straight, Yankees general manager Brian Cashman’s contract expires on Halloween and he was asked after the Angels booted the Yankees from the playoffs (again) if he was coming back and Brian started crying. People are interpreting that to mean he’s leaving. But I would think him crying would indicate he’s signed up for five more years of being Big Stein’s whipping boy.

The Boy Wonder is also a free agent on Halloween in Boston. I’m sure Theo’s not going anywhere, but it is curious that they haven’t exactly swooped in and given a contract extension to the guy who led the Red Sox to their first world title in 86 years. Could it be because an objective look at what Theo has done sort of makes it look like he lucked into that championship? This is a guy who tried to trade the guy who pitched and won the ALCS and World Series clinchers, just two months before they happened. He waived the World Series MVP the offseason before where he could have been had to anyone willing to take his salary.

Nah. It was all a grand plan.

Larry Rothschild is coming back for one more season with the Cubs. He was offered a multi-year deal to be on Jim Leyland’s staff in Detroit. Honestly, is this a tough decision? If you were offered a weekend vacation in Chicago or a three week one in Detroit, you’re taking the weekend in Chicago, right? I was all for Larry leaving until it was pointed out to me that the Cubs would be promoting minor league pitching coach Rick Kranitz to the top spot. Since the only pitchers who get injured more often than Cubs’ major leaguers are Cubs’ minor leaguers, I’d just as soon stick with Larry.

The Cubs are also bringing back all of their other coaches, so we know that the baserunning and hitting will continue to suck. Ahhh, 2006 is going to be great!

OK, by now you are wondering what the hell the new Desipio Media Venture is. Nothing can kill one site faster than branching off and trying to do two at the same time, right? Well, yes and…yes. Over the years, intentionally or not Desipio.com has become first and foremost a Cubs’ site. Whenever Matt would post something on the NBA there’d be about three comments on it before somebody hijacked the topic to something really important like “You think the Hornets are bad, man, the Cubs just re-signed Jose Macias!” Jake, of course, learned the secret is to write your basketball columns and break them up with pictures of half-naked women. And he got no argument from me.

Anyway, later on today we’ll go live with another site. It’ll be like our version of espn2, except without Keith Olbermann wearing a leather jacket and making Suzy Kolber hide in the women’s bathroom crying.