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Haugh: Urlacher joins parade of Bears defenders scoring TDs

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“The big plays, the takeaways, I’ve never been around anything like this in high school or college at any level,” Urlacher said. “Every week, it seems someone else is doing it.”

Much to the delight of Urlacher’s teammates, this week it was the emotional leader of Lovie Smith’s best defense ever. Sometime after Corey Wootton scooped up Sherrick McManis’ block of Brett Kern’ punt to score a 5-yard touchdown, Urlacher told Tillman he wanted in on the end-zone action.

“I said, ‘Hey, call it, man. The tongue has the power of life or death. Say it, speak it, believe it,’ ” Tillman said.

When Hasselbeck took the shotgun snap on first-and-10, Urlacher did it with instincts and experience — Urlacher’s biggest asset at this stage. He noticed Lance Briggs had jumped the running back and floated in front of wide receiver Damian Williams.

“I was just reading his eyes trying to get underneath one of those guys running across the middle,” Urlacher said.

Hasselbeck never saw Urlacher, who caught the pass and lumbered into the open field like so many Bears defenders had before him. He sidestepped Hasselbeck because NFL quarterbacks just aren’t supposed to tackle 258-pound linebackers, received a nice block from Israel Idonije and ambled across the goal line.

“I made it,” Urlacher kidded.

Was there any doubt?

“No,” Julius Peppers said. “He does it in practice all the time.”

Ho-hum. Urlacher’s pick-six made the Bears the first team in NFL history with seven interception returns for touchdowns in the first eight games. Yet, to a man, the Bears acted more thrilled about Urlacher making progress than their defense making history. They realize what a productive Urlacher means to a season looking more special every Sunday.

“We have been waiting for Brian to really step up like that,” Smith said.

Added safety Chris Conte: “It’s been a long road. To see him come back and make a play like that, we’re all proud of him.”

Respect and affection for Urlacher run deep enough to wonder if his uncertain future helps motivate a team driven to win a Super Bowl ring for the aging face of the franchise. No, Urlacher’s new mustache doesn’t include flecks of gray. But nobody except Urlacher knows how healthy his knee really is, and a contract paying Urlacher $7.5 million expires in eight games.

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