Baffoe: Jay Cutler's a Jerk

3rd N Long

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http://chicago.cbslocal.com/2015/11/02/baffoe-jay-cutlers-a-jerk-whos-screwing-up-the-bears-rebuild/

"By Tim Baffoe–

(CBS) The 2015 Chicago Bears were dead in the water before the rickety ship even set sail. Any honest observer came to terms with that in August and hasn’t let the pathos by local news stations grab them with how “heartbreaking” it could be for a 2-5 team to lose to a better team like the Minnesota Vikings on Sunday.

Bitter as it might be, the smart resignation was to hope for the best combination of the Bears positioning themselves toward a good draft spot while at the same time pieces of the future not regressing.

Oh, and make do with Jay Cutler at the helm and all his punchably smirking existence, too. At least that jerk would be gone soon.

Ignoring wins and losses, all isn’t bad. The Chicago defense seems to be scabbing over the massive wound inflicted by former defensive coordinator-turned-collegiate position coach Mel Tucker. Young players are playing hard for John Fox and his coaching staff, a far cry from the apathy worn on the sleeves of Bears under Marc Trestman last year.

The talent tank is by no means full, but it isn’t dry. Rookie Jeremy Langford proved capable of filling in for the injured Matt Forte (who may be out a while with speculation of an MCL injury), despite a crucial dropped pass late in the game.

“I just got to focus better on the ball and secure the catch to help my team out,” lamented Langford, “and Jay Cutler.”

Notice that the kid made a point to mention his polarizing quarterback, the same one Kyle Long said gave “another ballsy effort” despite losing his star running back and receiver Eddie Royal and playing behind a patchwork offensive line.

Long was mostly citing Cutler’s rushing touchdown in the fourth quarter in which the the quarterback chose to take a Vikings safety head-on instead of easily running into a wide-open corner of the end zone. It was a play that had almost everyone asking, “Dude, what are you doing?” — including Cutler.

“I instantly regretted it,” Cutler said about the needless injury risk. “I’m thinking the shortest distance is a straight line. I knew the situation and wanted to get a score. It was me on him, and ultimately we got the touchdown, so I can’t regret it too much.”

Despite it being illogical, it resonated with teammates and coaches.

“Tremendous job finishing there at the goal line,” Long said. “Speaks to the kind of person he is and the kind of player he is.”

Cutler lost just his 11th career game when not throwing an interception, and he’s been anything but one of the Bears’ problems this season. At least not in the immediate sense.

The Bears are amid a rebuild and trying to figure out what’s here that’s part of the future and what’s not. Two months ago, that conversation only included Cutler in terms of the one more year on his contract after this season being eaten or endured while selecting a franchise quarterback in the 2016 draft.

Despite Cutler’s resume that showed he’s the best quarterback in Bearsfranchise history even before tying Sid Luckman on Sunday for most passing touchdowns in a Chicago uniform, he’s now making a case to not be automatically dismissed. Through Monday, Pro Football Focus rates Cutler as a plus-QB (think baseball’s WAR but not in terms of games won) and the 13th-best quarterback this season, ahead of the likes of Philip Rivers, Drew Brees and Peyton Manning. Cutler finished 2014 ranked 31st.

Cutler has thrown for 1,442 yards with eight touchdowns and four interceptions.

Cutler is by no means one of the NFL’s elite at the position, but after most had accepted that “he is what he is,” he’s sort of bucking that acceptance. Now, one would assume Bears general manager Ryan Pace has to be at least a little vexed from when it was known in the offseason that he was trying to trade Cutler.

That’s compounded with the realization that the college quarterback class with names like Jared Goff and Connor Cook no longer elicits the salivating as it had in the preseason. A legitimate case can be made that sticking with Cutler and using what’s hopefully a top-10 pick to fill a need other than quarterback helps the Bears going forward more than drafting a passer in the first round. Though as Cutler continues to make the Bears not a lock to lose each week, they might find themselves picking in the middle of the first round and away from the top quarterback choices anyway.

Adam Gase actually finally, really, truly seems like “the one” on the offensive coordinator carousel who Cutler can thrive under. Complicating this, though, is Gase being already a top candidate for most vacant head coaching positions once this season ends. What would Cutler’s 27th (all numbers approximate) offensive coordinator bring about?

Such is the Jay Cutler problem and all its smirking irony. What a nightmare for that majority of Bears fans who despise him so much that they might not be rid of him. Even Cutler rationalists (raises hand) had entered this year with Cutler fatigue and figured for the sake of argument that soon moving on from his tenure would be best.

Meanwhile, Cutler keeps the rickety ship steady on a path to immediate nowhere, being cool and professional the entire way. And he gets the last laugh for now while media, fans and his superiors are confounded.

How dare he screw up plans for the future? What a jerk.

Tim Baffoe is a columnist for CBSChicago.com. Follow Tim on Twitter @TimBaffoe. The views expressed on this page are those of the author, not CBS Local Chicago or our affiliated television and radio stations."
 

3rd N Long

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Wrong forum. Belongs in the dumb Jay Cutler forum.

I'm sure it will be banished to that sub-forum soon enough. Until then I hope you enjoy the good read about one of the Bears most talked about players.
 

3rd N Long

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Bad read. Would not suggest anyone else read it.

Most will have read it before scrolling down to see your warning but I suppose it's worth a try right?

I know this article will rile up the haters. The funny thing is that it's not a fluff piece for Cutler. The guy actually nailed the Cutler situation down quite well in this article. I do suppose the parts that aren't referring to Cutler as the devil will probably keep the parts about Cutler's downside from being as satisfying to some.

That is a very predictable outcome though. So it is what it is.
 

Warrior Spirit

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Most will have read it before scrolling down to see your warning but I suppose it's worth a try right?

I know this article will rile up the haters. The funny thing is that it's not a fluff piece for Cutler. The guy actually nailed the Cutler situation down quite well in this article. I do suppose the parts that aren't referring to Cutler as the devil will probably keep the parts about Cutler's downside from being as satisfying to some.

That is a very predictable outcome though. So it is what it is.
I don't see Cutler as the QB you want to hold on to going forward in a rebuild. All know what he is by now. He's not going to take your team to the next level and he is your main rival's greatest asset. And no matter how his future cap hits compare to some of the other QBs in the league, he's a bad value for a team rebuilding.
 

Bearly

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This is like an off season 'what can I write about' piece with a couple of game references for effect.
 

3rd N Long

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I don't see Cutler as the QB you want to hold on to going forward in a rebuild. All know what he is by now. He's not going to take your team to the next level and he is your main rival's greatest asset. And no matter how his future cap hits compare to some of the other QBs in the league, he's a bad value for a team rebuilding.

While I disagree with your opinion on the subject. I find this argument to be much more valid than the salary route.
 

mecha

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which quarterback do you use in his place? a draft pick? a free agent? what great quarterback on a team now will not be on a team next year to even be a free agent choice? and which quarterback do you acquire to replace Jimmy Clausen?
 

3rd N Long

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This is like an off season 'what can I write about' piece with a couple of game references for effect.

Notice how the writer uses his last name to get hits.

Kind of like Scott Petersen meats started playing commercials on the radio right after the famous Scott Peterson was on trial for murder.
 

3rd N Long

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which quarterback do you use in his place? a draft pick? a free agent? what great quarterback on a team now will not be on a team next year to even be a free agent choice? and which quarterback do you acquire to replace Jimmy Clausen?

I believe the usual suspects currently have Hoyer as their undisputed contender for this role.

At least for now they do but the goal posts can be expected to move around here and there, you know?
 

mecha

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the Texans are bad though......
 

Larsonite

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It is possible Cutler is here through 2018 and possible he restructures the final two years of his contract to retire a Chicago Bear. This isn't an opinion or that I'm suggesting he should be kept that long, but given his contract and current acclimation of Gase's offense, it is very possible.

Sent from a spaghetti monster circling the earth
 

mecha

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I think he's playing more than serviceable. there's many other factors that can dictate his play outside his brain. if his arm strength deteriorates, he loses a key component of what he does. he'll be 35 by that time. the rest of the team needs to get built up more before any of this crazy talk about playoffs and super bowls. need a strong defense to keep points off the board (or gain points via turnovers!) and get the ball back in Bears offense control.

he's proven he doesn't need elite talent at all the major positions on offense. FFS do people forget what he had 2009-2011 already? that whole argument about him having all the weapons in the universe is weak.
 

3rd N Long

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It is possible Cutler is here through 2018 and possible he restructures the final two years of his contract to retire a Chicago Bear. This isn't an opinion or that I'm suggesting he should be kept that long, but given his contract and current acclimation of Gase's offense, it is very possible.

Sent from a spaghetti monster circling the earth

Well said. So much remains to be seen and played out.
 

3rd N Long

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I think he's playing more than serviceable. there's many other factors that can dictate his play outside his brain. if his arm strength deteriorates, he loses a key component of what he does. he'll be 35 by that time. the rest of the team needs to get built up more before any of this crazy talk about playoffs and super bowls. need a strong defense to keep points off the board (or gain points via turnovers!) and get the ball back in Bears offense control.

he's proven he doesn't need elite talent at all the major positions on offense. FFS do people forget what he had 2009-2011 already? that whole argument about him having all the weapons in the universe is weak.

Weak but used like its foolproof
 

Warrior Spirit

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It is possible Cutler is here through 2018 and possible he restructures the final two years of his contract to retire a Chicago Bear. This isn't an opinion or that I'm suggesting he should be kept that long, but given his contract and current acclimation of Gase's offense, it is very possible.

Sent from a spaghetti monster circling the earth
Again, I fail to see anything different w/Gase. Less productivity if anything. You've just made him an expensive game manager who manages to lose much more than he wins.
 

Larsonite

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Again, I fail to see anything different w/Gase. Less productivity if anything. You've just made him an expensive game manager who manages to lose much more than he wins.
Is he playing like a 15-20th ranked qb? because that's where his contract is at and will be through 2018. I'd much rather pay a qb top 5 money if he's playing in the top 5 but we're not going to find that in free agency and the draft only produces that one guy every 5ish years out of 30 ish QB's drafted over that time.

So you've got a 1 in 30 chance of finding a Rodgers, Brady, Brees, Rivers or Manning caliber QB over a 5 year period. I don't mind trying because you can't win if you don't play but the reality is that it's really hard to get a HOF QB.

Now you might say you'd settle for a top 5-10 but those odds aren't that much better and more importantly, that part of the list doesn't stay consistent. Wilson, Eli, Palmer, Luck, Ryan, Flacco... after a few QBs you start to wonder if they're even worth 5-10 money. And will they continue to be worth that contract.

I get trying when a QB draft prospect is available that you like but the odds aren't in your favor he'll be any good. Cutler at least gives us play worthy of his contract and most likely will continue to do so. I'm all for drafting and developing a QB but it's far more likely he'll be far worse than Cutler than better.

Sent from a spaghetti monster circling the earth
 

Monsieur Tirets

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Again, I fail to see anything different w/Gase. Less productivity if anything. You've just made him an expensive game manager who manages to lose much more than he wins.

exactly. the narrative that hes somehow turned a corner and elevated his game is pure fabrication.
 

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