The Seattle Seahawks lost 24-17 to the Chicago Bears on Monday night at Soldier Field to drop to 0-2 for the first time since 2015.

The Seahawks offense was stagnant for three quarters, although a pair of long drives in the fourth quarter helped make the game feel closer than it was.

Seattle had an ugly first half, although they went into halftime trailing by just 10 points — thanks in large part to Shaquill Griffin. The second-year corner had two interceptions, making him the first Seattle corner since Richard Sherman in 2013 to pick off two passes in a first half.

Seattle was unable to capitalize on either drive, however, as their offense struggled to move the ball. They finished the first half with 79 total yards, for an average of 2.8 yards per play.

Quarterback Russell Wilson was sacked five times in the first half alone, often holding on to the ball in the pocket for too long — an issue he ran into in Week 1 against the Broncos.

The third quarter presented even more problems. With running back Chris Carson sidelined taking a breather, the offense managed one yard on just six plays for the entire quarter.

The Seahawks roared back in the fourth, using a healthy mix of running and passing to punch in their first touchdown of the game on a 19-yard strike to Tyler Lockett. Sebastian Janikowski’s point after made it 17-10 with 10:19 remaining.

After a Bears punt, Seattle’s momentum was quickly stopped when Wilson threw an interception that was returned 49 yards for a touchdown, giving the Bears a 24-10 lead. On the next offensive set, Wilson fumbled for his second consecutive turnover.

The Seahawks put together a 99-yard touchdown drive late in the fourth, but Michael Dickson’s drop kick on the onside attempt was recovered by Chicago and they ran out the final seconds.

Seattle’s run game was once again nonexistent, although a potential injury to Carson could be part of the culprit. Rookie Rashaad Penny got 10 carries for 30 yards, nearly all of them in the fourth quarter.

Despite multiple injuries, Seattle’s patchwork defense managed to hold their own. Newcomer Mychal Kendricks and Frank Clark each had a sack of Mitchell Trubisky, and the defense forced Chicago into five punts.

Overall, it was a disappointing loss for a team facing multiple injuries on both sides of the ball.

The Seahawks open their home schedule against Dallas next week, hoping to avoid an 0-3 start. The potential return of linebackers Bobby Wagner and K.J. Wright would give this young team a nice boost.