


dislike any traditional rival.
Even if the Bears beat the 49ers this week, which is possible, and lose to the Lions the following week, which is probable …
If those games go that way, the Bears’ record will be 3-10 and they’ll be even more of an afterthought in and around the city and suburbs.
Local sports fans — we can’t even refer to them as Bears fans anymore — already are finding other things to do on game days.
The most telling sign usually is how many people are grocery shopping during what would be, say, the first quarter of the Bears game.
People figure that instead of wasting time waiting for another linebacker to limp off the field or wide receiver to drop a pass, they can pick up a six-pack of beer and frozen pizza for consumption during the Sunday night game.
A good guess is that gamblers aren’t even watching anymore: They might still bet on a Bears game but follow the score on smartphones while cruising the produce aisle.
Perhaps that was what the 11,086 no-shows for Sunday’s loss to the Titans were doing on what actually was a mild late-November afternoon.
Now fast-forward to mid-December, when both the temperature and snow might be falling at and on Soldier Field.
Think low 20s temperatures, winds blasting off the lake at 25 mph making it feel more like flat zero, and snow piling up on the field.
One of two things would happen on that day.
Either there will be about 20,000 fans in the stands at kickoff and about 10,000 at the final whistle.
Or about 40,000 will attend, with most of them wearing green and gold and booing the Bears and cheering the Packers.
The McCaskeys hate turning over Soldier Field to fans of that team from up north.
The family is even more embarrassed by the stadium looking like that than by the Bears looking like they have this decade.
Check out the 49ers and Packers games if only to see whether general manager Ryan Pace and head coach John Fox need to check escape routes out of town.
mimrem@dailyherald.com