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Bears hope for messy victory

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Bears cornerback Tim Jennings (26) celebrates with teammates Brandon Marshall (15) and Earl Bennett after he returned and interception for a touchdown during the second half against the Panthers on Oct. 28 at Soldier Field. (AP photo)

Before the end of today’s Bears game, Soldier Field could resemble a mud pit.

Temperatures will drop throughout the evening. Gusty winds will arrive. Rain could, too.

“We hope so,” Bears coach Lovie Smith said with a smile.

If the Bears were playing one of their rivals from the NFC North, maybe weather conditions would not matter so much. But Smith has been watching forecasts throughout the week while hoping for Mother Nature to harass the Houston Texans with a wet, cold night.

Regardless, the Bears (7-1) know they have to do their part to beat the Texans (7-1).

Both teams have looked forward to today’s game since the NFL released its prime-time schedule April 17. The forecast for an intriguing matchup was spot on.

In the past 20 years, it’s only the third time in which two teams with one or fewer losses have met after Week 8.

If the Bears and Texans meet again this season, it will be Super Bowl XLVII in New Orleans.

Until then, the teams will have to settle for a sloppy field on the lakefront.

Sloppy, that is, if Smith gets his wish.

“It’s November, and I’m sure Houston is expecting to play in bad weather,” Smith said. “I’ve been watching the forecast a little bit closer than I normally do, and I hear there’s a lot of rain and wind supposed to come in. Just make sure that you guys report that, OK?”

The implication of Smith’s request was clear.

The Texans, who practiced under sunny skies with temperatures in the 80s throughout the week, could be uncomfortable as guests in a stadium that is anything but climate controlled.

But Texans quarterback Matt Schaub and his teammates have played in the rain before.

“It’s just something you have to work through,” said Schaub, who was born in Pennsylvania and played collegiately at Virginia. “There were times, I remember back in college, we used to do a wet-ball drill day. Throw the ball in a bucket of water and then go play.

“You’ve just got to learn to adjust to it. It is what it is. It’s that way for both teams. You’ve just got to go play. The worst thing, though, is the wind. That’s the thing that affects [you], as far as the quarterback standpoint, more than the rain.”

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