When the 2019 NFL schedule came out over 6 months ago, the Chicago Bears circled Nov. 3 on their calendar: a rematch with the Philadelphia Eagles, the team that ousted them in last season’s playoffs with a chance at revenge.

Instead, a reeling Bears team came into Philadelphia at 3-4 and played their worst offensive half in nearly 40 years as they lost to the Eagles 22-14, their fourth straight loss.

Quarterback Mitchell Trubisky struggled mightily while his counterpart, Carson Wentz, was able to move the ball all day on the Bears defense, thanks to his running backs and tight ends.

The Bears now stand at 3-5 with questions mounting as they see their season slip away. Here are 5 takeaways from the Bears loss to the Eagles.

1. The offense failed in every category in the 1st half on Sunday

After having their best game of the season statistically against the Chargers, the Bears offense followed it up with a performance for the history books. The Bears totaled just 9 yards of offense, the worst output of any Bears team in the last 40 years, according to ESPN Stats and Info.

Trubisky missed open receivers, the running backs dropped passes and found little running room and the offensive line committed too many penalties while failing to protect the quarterback. Excluding an assist from an Andrew Sendejo penalty, the Bears only had one true first down in the first half.

Everyone involved in the game plan and execution is at fault for the ineptitude, and while it’s likely too late to make a change for a playoff push, something needs to be done going into next week’s game to salvage anything from this season.