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Haugh: Jay Cutler could be the next Jeff George

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(MCT) — Of all the former Bears players Chairman George McCaskey could have compared Jay Cutler to the other day, he chose George Halas.

Who last played in 1928. Who played end. Who never contributed to getting a head coach fired because, well, he was the head coach too.

McCaskey intended the bizarre comparison as a compliment to Cutler’s leadership, which after seven seasons remains unproven enough to fill hours of sports talk-radio debate. But really, all comparing the maddeningly inconsistent quarterback to Halas did was compel us to consider the hundreds of other Bears in history with whom Cutler has more in common.

Take Jeff George, for example, forever known around the NFL as a petulant symbol of squandered potential who spent the final month of the 2004 season with the Bears. Despite enormous physical skills, George won one playoff game in his career — and it didn’t come until his 10th season. Cutler has one playoff victory after seven. How long before Cutler gets his second after a coaching change? Will he ever?

Cutler supporters cringe every time their guy shares a sentence with George but, as No. 6 awaits his third NFL coach and sixth offensive coordinator, you wonder.

You wonder whether the Bears offense’s limitations have had everything to do with an overmatched offensive line or if those chronic issues have clouded the broader question of whether Cutler makes everybody around him better or worse. You wonder why the Bears offense never has been ranked higher than 23rd since Cutler arrived or why, after the Bears acquired Brandon Marshall and hired buddy Jeremy Bates as quarterbacks coach, he still finished 20th in passer rating with a Ryan Fitzpatrick-ish 81.3. You wonder if something intangible, something more than just good pass protection has been missing from the offense.

At least the men interviewing with general manager Phil Emery to become the Bears’ next head coach should wonder.

The process of overstating Cutler’s importance to the Bears has resumed in earnest in the days following Lovie Smith’s firing. McCaskey and Emery, who called Cutler the “franchise quarterback” he still could be, sounded like they had fallen in love all over again. His immense physical talent makes the infatuation understandable. I fell hard like much of Chicago on April 1, 2009 — one of the most exciting days in recent Bears history — when the Bears traded with the Broncos for Cutler. Fool me once ...

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