Smith: Team handled concussion properly

Cutler injury focus for Bears

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Jay Cutler gets examined after a hard hit by the Texans' Tim Dobbins on Sunday. Cutler left the game at halftime with a concussion.
Jay Cutler gets examined after a hard hit by the Texans' Tim Dobbins on Sunday. Cutler left the game at halftime with a concussion. (AP)
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LAKE FOREST – Coach Lovie Smith said the Chicago Bears properly handled quarterback Jay Cutler's concussion on Sunday night.

Smith said trainers immediately examined Cutler during a replay review after he took a helmet-to-helmet hit from Houston's Tim Dobbins late in the second quarter of a 13-6 loss to the Texans.

He said Cutler showed no symptoms of a concussion immediately after the hit, so the quarterback finished out the half. Symptoms showed up at intermission and Cutler wound up sitting out the second half, putting his status for next Monday's game at San Francisco in question.

Cutler will need to pass neurological and psychological tests and be cleared by both his team doctors and an independent neurological consultant before he can return.

The same goes for defensive end Shea McClellin, who left early in the game with a concussion. But unlike Cutler, he immediately showed symptoms.

Smith said both players were feeling "a lot better" on Monday.

"We do have a history with players, have a history with Jay, [former linebacker] Hunter Hillenmeyer," Smith said. "Every football team has players that they've gone through with concussions. And that's not just with concussions. We do that with all of our players with any injury that they have. We'll never put a guy at risk. No game is that important for us. The player's health always comes first with everything we do."

The retired Hillenmeyer was released after missing almost all of the 2010 season because of a concussion and is involved in a legal dispute with the Bears over how much money he's owed.

As for Cutler, the Bears believe the injury occurred on that hit from Dobbins with just under 3 minutes left in the quarter.

A scrambling Cutler had just unleashed a long pass on third down at midfield when he got drilled, resulting in an unnecessary roughness penalty. Cutler, who was shaken up on the play, also got called for an illegal forward pass because he was beyond the line of scrimmage, and the Bears challenged that call.

While the play was being reviewed, trainers examined Cutler on the sideline.

"It's not like he showed symptoms, but we had a break in between," Smith said. "Our trainers talked to him, evaluated him, he was fine from there. Players in the huddle didn't see anything wrong with him, at the time. Not just then, we just continued to talk to him all the way out, even through to halftime."

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