Ozzie Guillen's managing future is as difficult to decipher as Social Security reform, pension bailouts and 401(k) plans. The White Sox manager said he might quit when the team was skidding in September. The next week he said he might retire if Chicago won the World Series. Wednesday, before the deciding Game 4, he clarified his intentions, sort of. "I'd still think about it, but I was just trying to make a point," Guillen told the Pittsburgh Post-Gazette. "We were really struggling when that question was asked a while ago. I had just signed a new contract extension and I just wanted to make the point that I'm not here for the glory, I'm not here for the money. I'm here to win." He cited input from Braves manager Bobby Cox. "He called me and said, 'You don't retire from baseball. You make them retire you. Keep taking the money away from them,' " Guillen told the Post-Gazette.