[CBFF] Urlacher surgery should scare Bears -- chicagotribune.com -Sent Using Google Toolbar
Phil DeNomme
pdenomme at gmail.com
Fri Feb 8 08:30:48 MST 2008
I wonder if JA will make a serious offer to Briggs now.
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Sent: Friday, February 08, 2008 9:21 AM
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Subject: [CBFF] Urlacher surgery should scare Bears -- chicagotribune.com
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Urlacher surgery should scare Bears -- chicagotribune.com
www.chicagotribune.com/sports/cs-080207-morrissey-urlacher-surgery,1,1226034
.column
chicagotribune.com
Urlacher surgery should scare Bears
Rick Morrissey
In the wake of the news
February 8, 2008
Brian Urlacher is the face of the Bears. The face sits atop a neck
that recently underwent surgery.
Feel free to panic, Bears fans.
On second thought, don't panic. People who are privy to the details
of the surgery say it was routine.
Then again, is there such a thing as a routine surgery for someone
whose job revolves around catapulting himself head first into running
backs and quarterbacks?
Maybe a little bit of panic would be appropriate here.
Urlacher spent much of last season trying to deal with a back injury
that affected first his play and then his vocal cords in the presence
of media members. I didn't take an anatomy course in college, but I do
know that the spinal cord runs through the neck and the back.
It's Urlacher's neck. It's Urlacher's back. It is not a third-string
cornerback's neck and back.
You don't have to be flat-out scared, but being very concerned is
reasonable.
Urlacher is 30, relatively young in human years, but rapidly getting
older in linebacker years. His speed has made life miserable for
opponents, but playing the position takes its toll on a man. When you
use your body as a weapon, there has to be a cumulative effect. There
has to be a reckoning, whether it's when you're in the prime of your
career or when you're 60.
Is that what we're seeing now? The deterioration of a great player
whose neck might have been jarred one too many times? Or is it just
what the ever-secretive Bears likely will say it is-routine? A simple
mop-up operation?
They discovered Urlacher's neck problem in a routine postseason
physical, which led to the surgery, which surely had to send a shiver
of fear down the spines of the coaching staff and members of the front
office.
But sources tell the Tribune's David Haugh that Urlacher expects to
be ready for training camp.
I'm trying to decide what I'm more concerned about: That Urlacher has
a neck injury that required surgery or the invasive surgery itself.
Try as they might to sugarcoat things, the Bears saw slippage in his
play last season. He had more trouble than usual getting away from
offensive linemen. He had more than a few games in which he didn't
have an impact, something that was unheard of in previous seasons.
During the season, after denying he had a back problem, he finally
admitted to it to one of his media friends, and the news was out.
Tough injuries to players like Nathan Vasher and Tommie Harris played
a role in the defense's decline last year, but so did Urlacher's
subpar performance.
He did bounce back and played well toward the end of the season. But
no one was letting out a sigh of relief. No one with any investment in
the Bears-financial, emotional or otherwise-walked away from 2007
certain everything was OK with Brian Urlacher.
And now this.
Urlacher. Neck. Surgery. Other than "suspected news leak," those are
the three scariest words in the Bears' dictionary.
The Urlacher drama raises a few questions. Do the Bears now try to
find the money to keep fellow linebacker Lance Briggs, who will be a
free agent shortly? Does this change their plans for the draft?
I hope all of this is an overreaction, that the surgery was done to
alleviate pain or to shave a bone or to do whatever it is that
surgeons do during minor neck surgery. But it's hard to forget how
Urlacher goes about his business, the way he uses every bit of his
incredible speed to make plays. The head is connected to the neck, and
the neck is connected to the back. There is nothing connected to the
funny bone in this situation.
Routine? Minor? Sure, if you say so. But the NFL's history is
littered with players whose careers were affected or ended by neck
injuries. If you have been paying attention to Mike Ditka's crusade to
help former players with disabilities, you know this to be true.
It's why there should be some worry about Urlacher. Much of what the
Bears have been able to accomplish on defense the last six or seven
years has been because of him.
For all intents and purposes, he is the Bears, and anything that
happens to that neck of his is cause for concern.
They're hoping to bounce back in a big way next season, and the only
way they do that is with Urlacher leading them.
Come to think of it, panic is highly underrated as a reaction.
rmorrissey at tribune.com
Copyright (c) 2008, Chicago Tribune
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