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Haugh: It doesn’t matter how Bears won, they won

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From the first series when Jay Cutler underthrew an interception into what looked like triple coverage, it was clear the Bears did not have Carolina on their minds. They had fallen into the same trap that ensnares so many teams after “Monday Night Football” appearances, the one that makes it impossible to sense urgency.

It happens.

Championship teams find ways to win on their worst days the way the Bears just did. Forgive me for not letting an understandable letdown for three quarters change an opinion formed over the previous six games. Fans felt disappointed enough to boo — a natural reaction — simply because they had grown so used to cheering a team better than many expected.

If you thought the Bears could win the NFC North before kickoff but changed your mind watching the game, you really need to watch more games. You need to remember Bears-Cardinals, 2006.

“There’s no such thing as an ugly win,” Smith said. “The team that deserves it ends up on top.”

The Bears earned it when Tim Jennings intercepted Cam Newton and returned it 25 yards for a touchdown. They earned it one play earlier when a revived Cutler found tight end Kellen Davis for a 12-yard TD pass. They earned it when Gould, undeterred by a rare fourth-quarter miss from 33 yards, came through in the clutch as he typically does.

“The best kicker in the league,” Brian Urlacher said of Gould.

To ensure the Bears resemble one of the NFL’s best teams again, the offense must regroup. It starts with coordinator Mike Tice, whose game plan limited Matt Forte better than the Panthers. The offensive line lost too many one-on-one battles and Cutler held onto the ball too long as the Panthers registered six sacks. Bears receivers dropped too many passes the first 53 minutes, when it was assumed Earl Bennett must have been stuck in traffic.

Now would be a fine time for Tice’s offense to start clicking and stop tolerating excuses — which made Cutler’s accountability encouraging.

“No one played well,” Cutler said. “I didn’t play well.”

Yet the Bears overcame because Cutler completed 6 of 7 for 52 yards on the final drive when it mattered most. Because they have a veteran team that knows how to win. Because they refused to believe this wasn’t their day — or possibly their year.

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