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10-15-2012, 10:04 AM #111 
Originally Posted by
JustAnotherBearsFan99
It was just my feeble attempt at humor when I was trying to be funny/sarcastic in my earlier post about Gould etc. The heck of it is, I do like having Cutler as our QB. I'm not anti-Cutler at all. I just agree with your point #4 "Cutler is not going to be organizing a "Leaders of Tomorrow" conference anytime soon"... and I really don't care about that either, as long as he's a good QB for us.
Except for my Gould example, you were not either of the posters I was thinking of when I made my comment. I know how much of a Bears fan you are. If memory serves me correctly, we are on the same bandwagon stagecoach together :)
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10-15-2012, 01:29 PM #112
Member
My goodness people. Jay is a terrible leader, are we really still talking about this?
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10-15-2012, 02:02 PM #113 
Originally Posted by
XxMidwayMonstersxX
My goodness people. Jay is a terrible leader, are we really still talking about this?
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10-15-2012, 02:35 PM #114
Member

Originally Posted by
zifanq
jay cutler needs a shave
plad suit = stupid
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10-15-2012, 02:48 PM #115 
Originally Posted by
XxMidwayMonstersxX
jay cutler needs a shave
plad suit = stupid
When you make millions a year, you can wear whatever the heck you want
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10-15-2012, 05:33 PM #116
We're 4-1 and on Top of the NFCN, how is that not Cutler doing his job. Its not who scores first it's who has the most points at the end of the game. Wins don't have to be pretty nor do they need to be classy they just need to be wins. And as far as the bump goes who to say that isn't what Webb needed, as we have all seen since that bump Webb has played much better.

Originally Posted by
JustAnotherBearsFan99
But who should embarrass Jay when he's not playing well......when he's "Bad Jay" and throwing ints like it's Christmas & he's Santa giving gifts to the defenses?
Seriously, which player on offense should push "Bad Jay" round and yell at HIM when he's crapping up the field? Heck, maybe we can have all the players push or punch on whichever guy is sucking in any given game. Love it. WWF excitement. Whoever is struggling on the team can get humiliated in front of everyone.
Now THAT'S leadership.
And for that matter, why let the offense have all the fun trashing players. If Robbie Gould misses a FG, have a player kick him in the groin and drop his butt right on the field. Right there in front of everyone. He'll "learn" to make that NEXT field goal after that humiliation.
Heck let the defense in on the fun too. Have Peppers drop-kick a guy who gives up a TD. Or have Urlacher sucker punch a dlineman who is struggling.
Who needs coaches? Everyone can be a leader. Just yell and push around whoever is struggling on your team. Embarrass him, and that will make you a "leader" ...
This will also get the Bears "respect" when it's in front of national TV audiences too. Just look at how the NFL fans around the country rallied around Jay Cutler when he yelled at Webb.
Yeah, that's "leadership" that will work.
p.s. I just had an idea regarding who should be the "leader" who embarrasses Jay when he's tanking in a game. It doesn't HAVE to be an offense guy who embarrasses Jay - does it? Why couldn't Peppers push him to the ground and have Urlacher just sit on his head and cut a big juicy fart. Right there on national TV. I mean rip a big greasy one. We could call it "fart leadership" and be cutting edge on this new "leadership" thing in Chicago.
That would get Jay embarrassed enough to stop throwing ints in one of those "Bad Jay" games. This might work. Maybe this is what got guys like Joe Montana to the top. Good "leaders" embarrassing him.
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10-15-2012, 07:24 PM #117
Holy. Shit. This has been one slobber knocker of a thread. I grew so sick of reading it after the fourth page that I skipped to the end, and lo and behold, the bitch fest is just as lively now as it was earlier on!
Here's how I look at the Jay Cutler thing. I think he's a decent leader, but he needs to improve a lot on his bedside manner if he wants to reach the upper echelon of great quarterbacks leading by example. I personally disagreed with the way he handled Webb on TV; I thought that it would have been best if it had been handled behind closed doors. That being said, I will say that I don't think Cutler intended on turning this into a public ordeal at all. You know how cameras are these days. There's one spotlighting players all the time, particularly quarterbacks.
What is that old line from that classic Beatles song titled, "The Ballad of John and Yoko"? "Christ, you know it ain't easy/You know how hard it can be/The way things are going/They're gonna crucify me!" Part of me is divided in one direction while the other part is going down an entirely different path. On the one hand, I agree with JABF99: public humiliation is not the way you go about having a "heart-to-heart" chat with a co-worker or in this case, teammate, while you seek to push him to work harder at being the best player he can be because, let's face it, he can either kick it into high gear and work harder from the added motivation, or he can get upset and go into the tank even more so and therefore cause you more problems. On the other hand, Cutler probably didn't intend for this incident to become a big public spectacle on TV and later on in the media, and if one looks at it that way, the media should spend as little time on the subject as is humanly possible. Did Cutler make a mistake? Probably. Did he intend for it to go viral and become a big public media circus that has lasted for weeks since that God awful night in Green Bay? Probably not. I don't think he should have struck him with his shoulder because that was just unprofessional, whether it be in public or in private. But that's just me.
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10-15-2012, 07:52 PM #118
The problem isn't Cutler, it's us.
Some fans aren't happy no matter who is under center. You could have... hell, I can't think of any QB currently in the league that wouldn't come under fire from some fans in this city for one reason or another.
A lot of people need to get past their own perceptions of what a player is supposed to be. And a lot more need to accept that running the football is no longer 90% of the offense.
Chicagoans are just not used to having a QB. And for good reason. But a lot of this 'issue' has to do with holding on to an out-dated tradition of Bears football.
The guy isn't dealing or abusing, he's not beating on his woman and he's not violating any NFL policies that I know of. He's got the most talent at his position that this team has had since (insert name) and has had a HUGE impact on putting W's on the board, yet we're still finding reasons to harp on him.
Why? What for? Got someone else in your "I'm GM" fantasy mind you think it's actually possible (as in I'm alive-REALITY) to replace him with?
Yeah, there's going to be pros and cons on what he does (did), but for the love of football, this thread borders on obsession with some folks continuing distaste for Chicago quarterbacks.
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10-15-2012, 08:10 PM #119
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10-15-2012, 08:19 PM #120 
Originally Posted by
matsellah
The problem isn't Cutler, it's us.
Some fans aren't happy no matter who is under center. You could have... hell, I can't think of any QB currently in the league that wouldn't come under fire from some fans in this city for one reason or another.
A lot of people need to get past their own perceptions of what a player is supposed to be. And a lot more need to accept that running the football is no longer 90% of the offense.
Chicagoans are just not used to having a QB. And for good reason. But a lot of this 'issue' has to do with holding on to an out-dated tradition of Bears football.
The guy isn't dealing or abusing, he's not beating on his woman and he's not violating any NFL policies that I know of. He's got the most talent at his position that this team has had since (insert name) and has had a HUGE impact on putting W's on the board, yet we're still finding reasons to harp on him.
Why? What for? Got someone else in your "I'm GM" fantasy mind you think it's actually possible (as in I'm alive-REALITY) to replace him with?
Yeah, there's going to be pros and cons on what he does (did), but for the love of football, this thread borders on obsession with some folks continuing distaste for Chicago quarterbacks.
Did you read what I wrote? I don't not think Cutler isn't a leader. I think he is okay at it. But I do think there are things on which he can improve, like all the rest of us.
Cutler is younger than I am. I'm 31, and the closest I have ever come to being a leader of any kind over a group of people was when I was captain of my high school's academic quiz bowl team my senior year. I remember one time when my best friend (who is still my best friend to this day as we talk almost everyday either via phone or through text messages) cussed during a quiz bowl match in which we were getting whipped at Vanderbilt University in Nashville. I didn't say anything to him during the match because I knew that it wasn't the time to address the issue, so I waited until we were through getting schlacked. After the match, I grabbed him and yanked him around the corner of the hallway and rang his ass out for what he did. I think I got through to him, because he never did it again. But the moral to the story is that you don't knowingly publicly embarrass someone. That's lacking in class and it shows a lack of dignity on the part of the person delivering the rebuke.
Other than that, I have had no problem with the way Cutler handles himself except for some of his body language when things aren't going right. He's the best quarterback we've had since at least Ed Brown, and possibly even as far back as Sid Luckman. He's been to a Pro Bowl and might can go to another one if he can cut down on his interceptions. He's got the best arm in the league and is highly intelligent. Most of all, he is eloquent and very well-articulate. He has been a wonderful addition to this franchise, and I think he can lead us to a Super Bowl if he has the right pieces around him.