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Cutler healing, Bears hurting

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Bears quarterback Jason Campbell is sacked by 49ers defensive tackle Justin Smith and linebacker Aldon Smith (not pictured) during the fourth quarter of Monday night’s game in San Francisco. (AP photo)

Jay Cutler must be feeling better.

After all, Cutler was able to watch the Bears’ 32-7 loss to the San Francisco 49ers on TV until the final whistle without lunging for the power button on the remote.

Speaking publicly for the first time since his concussion, Cutler said Tuesday during his paid radio appearance on WMVP AM-1000 that he was feeling better more than a week after sustaining a helmet-to-helmet hit from Texans linebacker Tim Dobbins. Cutler promised that he would be back on the field soon, although he could not guarantee that it would be Sunday against the Minnesota Vikings.

“I can’t say that for sure,” said Cutler, who will require final clearance from an independent neurologist. “There’s still some things that we have to get done, and we’re going through the process. But I will play again this year. There’s no doubt about that.”

Whenever Cutler is cleared, the Bears will welcome his return. But unless he can play every position, his teammates have a lot of work to do for the Bears to be a playoff threat.

Quarterback: F

Jason Campbell (59 snaps) had a wonderful opportunity to audition for quarterback-starved teams as a 2013 free agent, and he blew his chance. He held on to the ball for too long on the Bears’ first pass play, which resulted in the first of 5 ˝ sacks by Aldon Smith, and he locked in on Devin Hester for the first of two interceptions. Throw in a pair of fumbles and a check-down pass to Matt Forte for 0 yards on third-and-11, and you have an all-around dud.

Running backs: C
Forte (47 snaps) ran for a pair of first downs on the Bears’ second series, and it looked as if he might be able to pace the offense. But after picking up 19 yards on his first four carries, Forte managed only 2.6 yards a carry for the rest of the game. Michael Bush (10 snaps) remained a highly paid afterthought in the offense.

Wide receivers: D
Much like the Green Bay Packers’ blueprint in Week 2, the 49ers successfully silenced Brandon Marshall (54 snaps) with two-man coverage in the secondary. Sure, Marshall caught a 13-yard touchdown pass in the third quarter, but by that time the 49ers were well on their way to a win. Alshon Jeffery (26 snaps) caught two short passes, while Devin Hester (19 snaps) caught three passes with his longest reception going for 9 yards.

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