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Haugh: Bears’ victory proves nothing

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“It wasn’t the best game,” Jay Cutler said, speaking for himself and the offense.

It wasn’t a game that did anything but make a potential Bears playoff opponent feel like the luckiest team in the field. The Cardinals came in leading the NFL in interceptions. Mike Tice interpreted that as an invitation to call 17 passes compared with 11 runs in the first half. What does it say when the most impressive touchdown drive in weeks came amid chaos with no timeouts at the end of the second quarter?

“I can’t really give you a reason why we hit on those plays but we miss on others,” Cutler said.

Nor can anybody come up with a valid reason why a Bears offense with the season on the line couldn’t move the ball better against a Cardinals team playing for draft position.

“They have good football players, a good front,” Smith offered. “We didn’t expect to come in here and score 50 points.”

You know, like the Seattle Seahawks did against the same defense two weeks ago.

It would be nice to put a bow on the Bears’ first win of December to pretty it up. Truth is, the Cardinals came bearing gifts on their second series. Beanie Wells coughed up the ball without contact at the 1 and it just lay there for Bears cornerback Zack Bowman. Bowman, a special-teamer used in two-tight end formations, pounced and rolled into the end zone.

“Johnny on the spot,” Bowman said. “It’s the holidays and I got my present early.”

‘Tis the season for the Cardinals’ offensive depth chart to keep giving. When Brian Hoyer replaced starter Ryan Lindley, somewhere, Jonathan Quinn plotted a comeback. Lindley was pulled after Charles Tillman returned an interception for a touchdown. Hoyer nearly matched that with a late pick that Kelvin Hayden returned to the 10. The Cardinals’ clown car of quarterbacks resembles the Bears’ 2004 model.

That cannot be ignored when evaluating the Bears holding the Cardinals to 248 yards, Julius Peppers making three sacks or the defense dominating enough to tempt many to say all is well again at Halas Hall. The first half of the season taught us not to fall into that trap again.

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