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Haugh: Bears serious about safety? Then sit Cutler

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Understandably, Cutler waved off team doctors and nobody administered a sideline concussion test during a five-minute lull because he wanted to display toughness. Regrettably, Cutler took seven more snaps. Each one represented a threat for a second hit to the head that “can be devastating” for concussed athletes, Mjaanes said.

On the next play, Cutler delivered a blow at the end of a run. Two plays later, he showed poor judgment in forcing an interception. But the most questionable decision was Cutler being on the field at all without thorough medical examination — even if the NFL determined Monday the Bears properly handled the injury.

“We’ll never put a guy at risk,” Bears coach Lovie Smith said. “No game is that important.”

Smith insisted Cutler presented no concussion symptoms until halftime. But isn’t reflexively putting one’s hands on his helmet after getting pummeled symptomatic of a player with a serious head injury?

“It was very concerning,” Mjaanes said. “My hope was after what happened in 2010 (with Cutler’s concussion against the Giants) people would have learned their lesson and been more aggressive (treating him). I want to be fair. I don’t know when his symptoms developed.”

Now an independent neurological consultant must clear Cutler, but how reliable are the league’s tests? Former Bears linebacker Hunter Hillenmeyer, forced to retire after a fifth concussion, cast some doubt.

“The baseline testing is not perfect,” Hillenmeyer said.

He described a process that requires players to show no symptoms at rest before showing the same asymptomatic signs after full exertion. But just like every hamstring heals differently, so does every brain. Therein lies the mystery, the danger and the reason to spare Cutler the 41/2-hour flight to California — the sky is no place for concussion patients either.

“You can find doctors who say a player should wait months after a concussion or doctors who say once a player is asymptomatic he is good to go,” Hillenmeyer said. “Truth is, when it comes to long-term effects, nobody really knows — not the Bears’ trainers and not the Bears’ doctors, and certainly not Jay. To me, that presents a situation where doing anything other than erring on the side of caution would be unforgivably irresponsible.”

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