Jay Cutler wins respect of Bears teammates with reckless run against Steelers
PITTSBURGH – Jay Cutler is the coolest villain in football.
If he didn't have that title locked up after years of thrilling and enraging those both for and against him, he cemented it Sunday in the fourth quarter of the Bears' 40-23 thumping of the Steelers on their home turf.
[Photos: Tour Jay Cutler and Kristin Cavallari's Chicago rental]
And thumping is the key word. Cutler got the ball deep in his own territory with the Bears
up four points and quickly faced third and 10. He tucked the ball,
thundered upfield and, instead of sliding as every franchise quarterback
is taught, lowered a shoulder and decked safety Robert Golden.
The drive was saved, the Bears' swagger was restored, and less than
five minutes later a 17-yard Cutler spiral landed in the arms of Earl Bennett
and the game was basically over. Cutler came into the drive with only
98 yards passing and two third-down conversions. He finished the game
with 159 yards passing and five third-down conversions. It was enough to
drive Cutler haters crazy and drive Steelers fans to the parking lot.
In the locker room afterward, the Bears themselves were debating Cutler just like the rest of the football world does. "It was a statement play for him," said defensive lineman Julius Peppers, cracking a grin. "Whether he meant to do it or not, it gave us a shot of confidence."
[Watch: Top 5 must-see NFL plays from Sunday]
Jay Cutler threw for 159 yards and a touchdown against the Steelers. (USA Today)
"I'd like to see him on the ground," said offensive guard Kyle Long.
Cutler himself, dressed to the nines in a suit after the game, shrugged it off as only he can. He said he simply didn't know where the first-down marker was, even though he was nearly 10 feet past it. "NotJayCutler," the satirical Twitter feed dedicated to the Chicago quarterback, had this comment:
"I'm amazing."
Unfortunately
for those who love trashing Cutler for his petulance and his playoff
résumé (or lack thereof), No. 6 is slouching toward amazing. His fourth
quarter on Sunday was reminiscent of the guy on the other side of the
field, Ben Roethlisberger, who has often seemed vacant in the early parts of games only to save the day at the end. Cutler is doing that now. The Bears are 3-0 and all three games required key fourth-quarter touchdown throws from Cutler. He found Brandon Marshall with the game-winner in Week 1 after being down 11 to Cincinnati. He threw a last-second touchdown to Bennett in Week 2 to beat the Vikings. And now this against the Steelers. None of these three wins were scintillating, but all three were clutch.
[Week 3 Winners and Losers: Saints’ defense puts NFC on alert]"This is as excited as I've seen him," said backup Josh McCown. "The feeling is we can do this all the time."
Part of that is certainly because of the offense of new coach Marc Trestman, but part of it is Cutler himself, who oozes with confidence and not just smugness. Yes, this is the same guy who once boasted that he had a stronger arm than John Elway "by far" and didn't see why his Broncos team couldn't score 30 points a game. Yes, this is the same guy who has a grand total of one playoff win and two playoff touchdown passes.
That guy, "Smokin' Jay Cutler," the apathetic-looking man who inspires anything but apathy, has as many fourth-quarter comebacks and game-winning drives this month as he had in the previous two seasons combined.
Cutler has helped guide the Bears to a 3-0 record after their victory over the Steelers. (USA Today)
The Bears did, and rebuilt the momentum that had completely fizzled after a 17-0 first-quarter burst.
"I'm proud of him," said McCown. "He's consistently stepping up. That's what the best ones do."
Oh
sure, there's still plenty about Cutler that can rankle. The best
example came in the first quarter, when the Bears had first and goal on
the Steelers' 1 and Cutler handed off to Bush.
He raised his arms even before Bush got to the goal line, and Bush was
stuffed. Then, after an incomplete pass, he handed to Bush again, and
again he raised his arms before Bush got to the goal line. Still no
touchdown. Finally, it was fourth and goal, and Bush got the ball one
more time. Again Cutler raised his arms right away. This time, Bush got
in, and Cutler punched the chilly air in front of him.
[Related: Adrian Peterson’s daughter keeps it real after Vikings’ loss to Browns]His bravado will grow even more tiresome to many as the Bears continue to win, yet Cutler will only get more allegiance in his locker room. Teammates believe in him as much as Cutler's always believed in himself.
"No matter what people say," Bush said, "We know he's there to win."
It should be noted that Cutler was downright gracious in his postgame news conference, lavishing credit on his offensive linemen, his receivers and even the Steelers. There was none of the impatience, none of the attitude. A man known for saying some of the wrong things said only the right things.
[Photos: NFL cheerleaders of Week 3]
"Offensively, I didn't play that great tonight," Cutler said humbly.
Did he really mean that? It doesn't matter. Jay Cutler is only getting better, and so resenting him is only getting worse.
original site
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