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Cutler restores sense of calm to Bears’ offense

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Bears quarterback Jay Cutler throws a pass during the third quarter Sunday at Soldier Field. The Bears beat the Vikings, 28-10. (Josh Peckler - jpeckler@shawmedia.com)

CHICAGO – If not for Jay Cutler, the Bears likely would have been doomed Sunday.

The offense’s first series started with a fumble. Its second series opened with a stumble.

But a rejuvenated Cutler refused to allow the offense to fall on its face again – even if that meant leaning down and tying J’Marcus Webb’s shoe during a timeout in the second half.

“I loosened it, tied it,” Cutler said with a grin. “I guess my fatherly instincts were kicking in.”

Gather around, children. Order has been restored to the Bears’ playoff pursuit.

The Bears overcame a slow start and a slew of injuries to beat the Minnesota Vikings, 28-10, in front of 62,306 fans at Soldier Field. Cutler passed for one touchdown and Michael Bush ran for two as the Bears (8-3) snapped a two-game skid before it became something worse.

Meanwhile, the Vikings (6-5) missed a chance to pull even with the Bears in the NFC North.

“It was a game we had to have,” Bears coach Lovie Smith said.

And Cutler was the player the Bears most needed to have.

A one-and-a-half-game absence because of a concussion illustrated Cutler’s value to the offense for those who required further proof. Eight-year veteran Jason Campbell struggled as Cutler’s replacement, and the Bears scored 10 points in six quarters without Cutler.

A day after Cutler received final clearance to face the Vikings, the Bears’ offense returned to competence. They did so despite injuries to three starters, running back Matt Forte (ankle), left guard Chris Spencer (knee) and right guard Lance Louis (right).

The constant amid so many changing pieces on offense was Cutler, who fired several passes into airtight spaces, including a 13-yard touchdown to Matt Spaeth in the second quarter. He absorbed a big hit from Vikings defensive end Jared Allen a moment after his pass to Spaeth, but he quickly returned to his feet as his teammates celebrated in the end zone.

Cutler’s final statistics were good but not great (23 of 31, 188 yards, 1 TD, 1 INT), but his impact on the game plan and the end result was impossible to overlook. He scrambled to evade Vikings’ pass rushers on several plays, and he completed 15 of his first 17 passes to help the Bears establish a comfortable 25-3 lead by halftime.

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