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Haugh: Bears’ Urlacher should address treatment issues frankly

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CHICAGO (MCT) — Back to being a Pro Bowl grump Wednesday at Halas Hall, Brian Urlacher refused to clarify the mysterious circumstances surrounding treatment of his injured left knee.

Urlacher’s reaction provided the least surprising aspect of a story that cannot go away fast enough for the Bears. Only coach Lovie Smith’s defensiveness was easier to predict.

“Once you come up with someone that says this happened, then I can respond to it,” Smith snapped to reporters. “I know right now Brian Urlacher is here, getting healthy every day. And I don’t see what else we need to talk about.”

I do.

A Tribune report Wednesday revealed Urlacher went to Germany earlier this summer to seek an alternative, non-invasive procedure known as Regenokine therapy at Dr. Peter Wehling’s facility.

Wehling collaborated on the creation of the treatment with partner Chris Renna, a renowned preventive medicine specialist in Santa Monica, Calif., who was Wehling’s co-author for “The End of Pain.”

Renna gained unwelcome notoriety eight years ago when the San Jose Mercury News reported he supplied BALCO founder Victor Conte with undetectable testosterone cream. Former NFL player Bill Romanowski reportedly introduced Renna to Conte.

It really doesn’t matter that Renna never was accused of violating federal drug laws or regulations. Or that Renna’s connection to Conte has nothing to do with Urlacher. It doesn’t matter if the International Olympic Committee deemed Regenokine a non-performance enhancing treatment and pro sports leagues accept the revolutionary method as legitimate.

Fair or not, the name Conte, a symbol of sports stain, connected even remotely with any superstar requires explanation. In a sporting world plagued by doping where perception blurs reality, the Bears franchise player linked to blood-spinning therapy that isn’t FDA-approved merits more than a unified dismissive front.

The Bears and Urlacher could elaborate or educate instead of obfuscate. The less they say, the more curiosity piques. That’s human nature. That’s Chicago. Concealing information about Urlacher’s European vacation created an air of mystery when transparency could have kept preseason focus on what looks like a playoff team.

We understand and respect why Urlacher would seek a non-surgical solution on the other side of the Atlantic that worked for stars like Kobe Bryant and Alex Rodriguez. Even if Urlacher made the trip independently, it shows how badly the 34-year-old wants to play. But playing coy only further mystifies the process.

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