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Haugh: If Bears fail to make playoffs, expect Smith and Urlacher gone

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(MCT) — Nothing signaled a Bears season suddenly gone askew Wednesday more than reporters surrounding backup linebackers Geno Hayes and Dom DeCicco, who both are closer to becoming potential answers to a trivia question than making a major impact.

What two players went in the lineup and on the roster after Brian Urlacher’s last game in a Bears uniform?

That possibility loomed ominously this week after Urlacher strained his right hamstring against the Seahawks, meaning he likely will miss the final four regular-season games and perhaps the playoffs. Yes, the playoffs, which the 8-4 Bears have no excuse to miss again even without their emotional leader whose injury raised more compelling questions.

When his hamstring popped in overtime Sunday, anybody else wonder what effect limited practice time due to a mysterious chronically bad left knee had on the conditioning of a 34-year-old pushed beyond his limits? Anybody in Chicago consider who would return to action first, Urlacher or Derrick Rose? How many Bears fans, in this age of instant analysis, immediately feared that would be the last they saw of No. 54 wearing a “C” on his helmet?

The understandable speculation over Urlacher’s next step makes sense. General manager Phil Emery hardly seems like the sentimental type and, with no contract for next year, what Urlacher still can do on Sundays will trump what the best player of the post-Ditka era has done. If coach Lovie Smith cannot find a way to salvage a playoff season for the second straight December, then he won’t be around to push for his Cover-2 middle linebacker who’s unlikely to leave town before Smith does.

Yet it still seems a little early to start wondering whether Urlacher fits better with the Cardinals or Cowboys in 2013. To me, the most likely scenario still favors the Bears and it starts unfolding Sunday at the Metrodome.

“Plan B for us is pretty good,” Smith said Wednesday.

Nobody would dare admit it, but I know of at least one conversation among Bears staffers this season about whether Plan B even might be better. It involves Hayes starting at strong-side linebacker and moving Nick Roach into Urlacher’s spot in the middle. Both will do professional jobs against the Vikings. Neither is Urlacher who, even in decline, will be missed for intangibles harder to measure than solo tackles.

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