More than Smith’s job on line

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Without question the final three games of the Bears season represent a referendum on Lovie Smith and even making the playoffs, but losing in the first round might not be enough to point the arrow up at Halas Hall.

"It's all based on wins and losses,'' Smith said Monday.

At this point it goes beyond a winning record, Lovie. If the Bears showed 11-win promise in the first half, the McCaskeys must ask tough questions if Smith's fading team falls short of its potential again. Over time, franchises that philosophically value the floor over the ceiling for too long often have the bottom fall out.

As record-setting wide receiver Brandon Marshall reaffirmed Sunday, the Bears, "have the guys in this locker room to get it done.''

Indeed they do. But those guys Marshall refers to better start getting it done or else their jobs deserve to be in as much jeopardy as Smith's.

Those guys better start playing as if their football lives depend on every snap – the way Marshall and Jay Cutler and Lance Briggs do consistently –€” before it is too late.

Even with an inferior offensive line, the Bears roster includes too many veterans among the best at their positions for general manager Phil Emery to accept another mysterious late-season slide.

Remember the debate over whether Marshall, Jay Cutler and Matt Forte were a more dangerous trio than Andre Johnson, Matt Schaub and Arian Foster of the Texans?

Remember the national media campaign for Cutler as league MVP?

Remember when the 2012 Bears defense was being compared to the '85 Bears?

Remember when Charles Tillman was a Defensive Player of the Year candidate and when Julius Peppers didn't need six games to record only two sacks?

Ample talent exists. For whatever reason, Smith and his coaches have failed to maximize it over the past month of misery. The Bears are better than this.

Perhaps that was part of the message Emery shared withSmith in a private postgame meeting in the Metrodome locker room. Nobody really knows what Emery thinks of Smith's role in the Bears' skid or what Emery believes about much of anything.

="We'll take that one step at a time,'' Emery said. "First, he's got to get healthy.''

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