As with any polarizing figure, Jay Cutler brings about strong emotions on both sides of the fence. Many people believe he's the worst thing that ever happened to professional quarterbacking, someone who sucks so bad he'll be in the UFL in a few years. Others believe his golden arm will carry him to the Hall of Fame eventually and every mistake he's ever made has been someone else's fault. As with most extreme arguments, the best answer lies exactly in the middle. Cutler has tons of talent, but he has very large strides to make before he can be considered the franchise quarterback many believe him to be.
In a Thursday night 10-6 loss to the San Francisco 49ers, we saw a wide variety of failures on his part in addition to things happening to him that weren't his fault.
His first interception was one of the worst passes I've ever seen a quarterback make. And I officiate elementary football. How in the world Cutler thought he could throw a football, literally, through three defenders and get it to Kellen Davis in the end zone is beyond anything I can comprehend. I can't even use the proper language to describe what an egregiously brutal decision that was. Throw it away and take the three points -- especially in a game that was scoreless and already into the second quarter. Cutler's last interception was ill-advised and equally bad in his physical placement. He could have placed it high and to the left of Greg Olsen and possibly completed the game-winning touchdown. Instead, he threw right to Michael Lewis for a loss-clinching interception.
On the flip-side, the offensive line was pathetic, as usual. Cutler rarely had even three seconds to throw the football and constantly had to quickly dump it off into the flats. The run game was, once again, non-existent as the sorry line couldn't give Matt Forte any running room -- and if you doubt Forte's running ability, watch him on the screen passes. Cutler did check down well, which is a step in the right direction. His second interception was clearly not his fault, as Devin Hester fell down after the pass had already been released. You could make a case the third and fourth interceptions weren't his fault if you wanted, too. I'm not going to bother, because -- even if you make the case -- his first and last interceptions were ultimately what cost the Bears the game.
The amazing thing is Cutler's ineptitude in the red zone. He drove the Bears down the field with ease, after getting a very generous illegal contact penalty to extend the drive, and had them in position to win the game. He worked beautifully on the drive, pre-pick, hitting eight consecutive (excluding the two spikes to stop the clock) passes and moving the Bears 70 yards in just over two minutes. Then he fell apart when the team needed him most.
It's the way things have gone thus far in his career. This is where the haters proclaim he's not a winner and he sucks. Which is where they lose my backing.
He's 26, not 36. This wasn't a one (or two) year rental like the Vikings are doing with Brett Favre. The team acquired Cutler to make him the long-term answer and build an offense around him, not to be a quick fix. Sure, many thought he catapulted the Bears to the Super Bowl discussion, but that doesn't mean he needs to be dumped after one sub-par season. Let the Bears find him a line, let the young receivers grow rapport with Cutler and -- most of all -- please get someone to coach Cutler.
The errant red zone passes have to stop. Someone needs to teach him to throw the ball away. Someone needs to tell him his attitude is not acceptable (seriously, what the hell was with taking the helmet off to scratch his head and put it back on? That was embarrassing). Someone needs to coach him to shut the hell up instead of screaming at officials after he throws a pick (he was even called for unsportsmanlike conduct against Arizona). Someone needs to make him accountable for all his mistakes, not just blame them all on someone else. And being accountable -- by the way, Cutler did personally apologize to the defense in the post-game press conference -- isn't enough. He has to learn from his mistakes and change the way he plays. Of course, the masses also need to realize the problems on the Bears are much more complicated than simply blaming their favorite whipping boy.
Is it Cutler's fault that the defensive line can't line up properly (four off-sides penalties, including one that nullified an interception in San Fran territory)? Is it Cutler's fault that the Bears decided to leave Greg Olsen on the sideline and instead use their third-string tight end and a tackle-eligible on a pivotal goal line third down (which resulted in the aforementioned first interception)? Is it Cutler's fault that a lineman was downfield illegally, which nullified a 40-yard completion to Earl Bennett? Is it Cutler's fault that Chris Williams drew a foolish unnecessary roughness penalty on the last drive, taking them backward 15 yards when time and yardage were at a premium? Was it Cutler's fault last week when the defense couldn't stop Arizona, even on the ground?
Blame Cutler for his ills, just not for the entire team's ills -- including coaching. Thursday night, we witnessed an undisciplined mess of a team on offense, defense and special teams (a delay of game on a field goal attempt? Seriously?). There's plenty of blame to go around right now, so place it properly.
While you're at it, remember this is Year One of the Cutler era in Chicago, not the one year of it.




















Reader Comments (Page 1 of 1)
11-13-2009 @ 1:19PM
Perry said...
Matt: Two questions
(1) Of all the names you mentioned in your article, which of them cost the Bears a 1st and 3rd-round draft pick?
(2) Let's say for argument's sake that Kruetz is old, Pace is done, there's room for a better OG and the defense could use four more quality athletes. Then there's that "need" for another quality WR to give Cutler more options. How would you suggest the Bears fill 10 holes in 2010? Maybe by 2011 they can do it if they draft perfectly and sign just the right FAs, but then won't some of their current players be older and on the FA market?
See, spending big on a "POTENTIAL franchise QB" before the rest of the pieces are close to being in place is not the way to go unless you're Jimmy Johnson and have 3 years and a ton of draft picks from 1989 to 1992. Maybe if you were the Ravens or Atlanta and had some established young talent could you draft a 1st-round QB and succeed. Maybe if the Steelers taking Big Ben after Eli and Rivers in the '04 draft and succeeding because the team itself was veteran and deep....
maybe then you take the step to get Cutler for a #1 and a #3.
I believe the Bears will spend three years trying to build around Cutler before they realize he wasn't the guy they should be building around.
The arguments that he is a fraud or he is a savior will continue until 2012, when everyone will then see the reality. You say it will be savior. I say it will be fraud.
He will always throw for a ton of yards.
He likes the deep ball. It's why he won't succeed.
I think he has too many fundamental flaws that are apparent ( but overlooked because of his powerful arm). I also think he lacks the head for the position.
Nice article even if it was "cleverly slanted" in Cutler's favor.
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11-13-2009 @ 1:33PM
woodbyr62 said...
Chicago got a cry baby that can throw the ball, unfortunately to the other team. Denver, we got a QB that is afraid to throw deep but cost us less money and earned us 2 first round picks. Either way Orton hears a boo and Chicago has a wah! Good luck Chicago!
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11-13-2009 @ 1:55PM
matt said...
Totally true. Although Kyle orton does suck, the Broncos got 2 first round picks for that trade. Kyle Orton cant throw the ball downfield, but he doesnt make all of those mistakes. Im a Bears fan, but Jay is playin so so bad. Was he THIS bad in Denver?
11-13-2009 @ 1:54PM
T said...
Yes he is 26 not 36. But at 26 actually well before that I came the realization.. IM NOT AS GOOD AS ELWAY!!! The penalties are really irrelevant, so are the sandwich picks. So are the line woes. He has had five months to get on the same page with his wide outs and even that is meaningless.. Both trips that counted 2 picks no points.. I will agree with you. It wasn’t his entire fault. And I am sure that’s what Jay will say today as well. And that’s why he isn’t a winner. 4 and 5 with 17 picks already this season. If this had been Orton or Grossman the media would crucify them. But you all keep holding Jay's hand (awww there there Jay it’s not all your fault). Maybe if he had Mike on his side line instead of Lovey? I know Mike would walk up to his QB SLAP him in the back of the head and say “YOUR NOT AS GOOD AS ELWAY I know I played against him”!
p.s. i am not a bears fan so coud truly care less
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11-13-2009 @ 2:14PM
JFCJR said...
I would still take Cutler over the piece of crap Orton that we have in Denver. Denver goes 6-0 and every Bronco fan is ready to shoot their wad and name their 1st born "McHoodie"........
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11-13-2009 @ 2:21PM
Da Gimp said...
He's got great arm strength. There's no denying that, but some of the best quarterbacks in NFL history couldn't complete a pass of more than 40 yards on a regular basis, yet found ways to win, and NOT throw 4 or 5 interceptions continuously. Cutler is going to be remembered as claiming he was "a better QB than John Elway", and for this trade that cost the Bears so much, and benefited the Bronco's so greatly right off the bat. At least Orton will listen to his coach, and not scream at anyone who's around how much he hates the guy. Real class move there Jay. Can't say I feel sorry for him, but the Bears DO have my sympathy.
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11-14-2009 @ 11:59AM
toddsworld05 said...
He never said he was better than elway, he said his arm was stronger thany elway's
11-13-2009 @ 3:15PM
rrusrjr2 said...
The Bears are victims of hype. Cutler is victim of having no brain, but large ego. He looks downfield all the time while mid and short range options occur. A homer hitter, or should we say, attempter. He is only 26, yes, but he's had several years as starter, with a 21-25 record, plus bad results in the Red Zone BEFORE coming to Chicago. I really believe Cutler is uncoachable. what does he care, he has $20 million more of the Bears money to throw around.
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11-13-2009 @ 3:47PM
jj said...
Well said, musrjr2.
I agree.
11-15-2009 @ 8:51AM
steelhrt14 said...
Do you watch tennis? I think your in the wrong room! This is american football. WOW! Very foolish perspective
11-13-2009 @ 3:47PM
jwcisler said...
Denver...you had a solid QB in Plummer...but, mgmt. treated him like crap. He looks like Peyton compared to Cutler and Orton.
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11-13-2009 @ 7:44PM
woodbyr62 said...
Chicago, give us 2 more first round picks and you can have our other cry baby WR Brandon Marshall!
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11-13-2009 @ 7:49PM
woodbyr62 said...
Matt, Cutler wasn't as bad in Denver, but Denvers offensive line gave him more time to make better decisions. Phillip Rivers called him a cry baby a couple of years ago, don't like Rivers, but I guess he was right.
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11-15-2009 @ 12:13PM
montunaman said...
Wow, this debate is getting old and tiresome
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11-15-2009 @ 7:49PM
Tony said...
To all those Cutler "haters" put Tom Brady or Peyton Manning on this Bears team and nothing would change,the o-line would be able to block Cub Scout troop 27 the defense wouldn't be able to stop the Little Sisters of The Poor and the receivers would still turn the wrong way!
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11-16-2009 @ 10:02AM
frankjl66 said...
Cheer up Bears fans. My eagles are coming into town next week and with their lousy o line play, it will be a long night for McNabb
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