Chicago Sun-Times

JAY’S RETIREMENT PLAN

Cutler retires and takes his talents to network analyst role

- ADAM L. JAHNS

Dec. 18, 2014, was a signature day in Jay Cutler’s career. He met the media when he didn’t have to during one of the most controvers­ial seasons in recent memory.

Former coach Marc Trestman, who was hired to get the best out of Cutler, had turned his back on him. Cutler was benched, and Jimmy Clausen got the start.

All of it was mind- blowing. But there was Cutler in the Bears’ new media center at Halas Hall.

“There’s enough distractio­ns going on in this building that my focus could only be just helping the guys and the offense, trying to help Jimmy,” Cutler said then.

From there, the conversati­on turned to whether Cutler thought he played his last game for the Bears.

“It definitely crossed my mind,” Cutler said. “For sure.”

His willingnes­s to engage those who had ridiculed him for years — for his turnovers to leadership skills to body language and so on — at a time when anarchy ruled Lake Forest encapsulat­ed his changing narrative.

It was a low moment for the Bears — Trestman, general manager Phil Emery and plenty of players would be gone soon enough— but it was a good one for him.

On Friday, the changes in Cutler that were seen and heard over the past fewyears in Chicago were finally recognized at a national level. Cutler officially joined Fox Sports as a game- day analyst. He will team with play byplay announcer Kevin Burkhardt, analyst Charles Davis and sideline reporter Pam Oliver.

Cutler’s first game as a member of the media will be the Bears’ third preseason game against the Titans Aug. 27 in Nashville, where he played collegiate­ly at Vanderbilt and where his family now calls home.

In an interview on ESPN Radio, Cutler called his decision permanent, though he acknowledg­ed that he would still be playing with the Bears if they hadn’t released him. At 34, only certain teams would have interested him, and that didn’t materializ­e.

“If things would have worked out differentl­y in January, February and March, we might be in a different situation, but they didn’t,” Cutler said. “So this is where we are, and I feel really good about it.”

Cutler first considered the move to broadcasti­ng in January after talking to his wife, reality star Kristin Cavallari.

With a Cardinals- Seahawks game as his assignment, Cutler auditioned with Burkhardt last Thursday in Los Angeles. He studied the analysis of Troy Aikman, Jon Gruden and John Lynch.

“I felt as prepared as I was going to be,” Cutler said. “I just kind of went in and winged it.”

In 2013, Cutler’s public persona began to change lo-

cally. He engaged more with the media, starting with weekly appearance­s on a radio show. He still scoffed at certain questions, but queries about the X’s and O’s and certain matchups often led to insightful responses.

At times, Cutler’s sense of humor took over news conference­s. His sarcastic, dry wit garnered real laughter.

Reporters sought reasons for the change. Columns went from ridiculing his body language to highlighti­ng his maturation and to detailing how marrying Cavallari and becoming a father changed him.

It helped that Trestman and Emery — at least initially — believed in him. He was signed to a seven- year deal worth $ 54 million guaranteed.

Cutler’s detractors can still point to his .500 record, intercepti­ons and his run through coordinato­rs.

But Cutler always had his backers inside Halas Hall, though many still ignore it.

“We’re excited for the fans to get to know the Jay Cutler we knew inside the walls of Halas Hall,” chairman George McCaskey said in a statement.

General manager Ryan Pace might have been eyeing the Bears’ next quarterbac­k, but he, coach John Fox and former offensive coordinato­r Adam Gase also warmed to Cutler. And current offensive coordinato­r Dowell Loggains is a friend.

“I already told him I’m going to crush every play call,” Cutler said. Of course, that was a joke. It’s another example of the “new” Cutler who arrived in town a few years ago. And it’s what Fox wants.

“I’m really happy with where I am in my life,” Cutler said, “and really the future going forward.”

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 ?? JONATHAN DANIEL/ GETTY IMAGES ??
JONATHAN DANIEL/ GETTY IMAGES
 ?? | JASON BEHNKEN/ AP ?? Jay Cutler’s transition to a TV analyst signifies how perception­s of him have changed.
| JASON BEHNKEN/ AP Jay Cutler’s transition to a TV analyst signifies how perception­s of him have changed.
 ?? | FOR THE SUN- TIMES ?? Despite a falling- out with former coach Marc Trestman, Jay Cutler took things in stride and still engaged with the media.
| FOR THE SUN- TIMES Despite a falling- out with former coach Marc Trestman, Jay Cutler took things in stride and still engaged with the media.
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