Name 3 things that are better about the team today than last year without saying the draft picks who haven’t played yet will be great, because there is no way of knowing that.
Man...you're on a tear these days. The offense as a whole is significantly better, save for the offensive line - and that's probably going to have to be the priority draft-wise next April. And you can't throw out the draft picks because they absolutely do matter in this equation, especially given their trouble attracting free agents.
But to answer your question, they're already much improved compared to a year ago:
2023 Week 1 Offensive Skill Players:
JuJu Smith-Schuster
Kendrick Bourne
DeVante Parker
Demario Douglas
Rhamondre Stevenson
Ezekiel Elliott
Ty Montgomery
Kayshon Boutte
2024 Potential Week 1 Skill Players*:
*Obviously depends on final cutdowns, etc.
Demario Douglas
Ja'Lynn Polk
Javon Baker
K.J. Osborn
Tyquan Thornton
Rhamondre Stevenson (who they extended this offseason)
Antonio Gibson (above Montgomery - Elliott played way above expectations last year)
Kayshon Boutte
The ones highlighted in red are players who are absolutely upgrades over that original group, with Smith-Schuster, Parker, and Montgomery being guys who really didn't contribute and hamstrung their ability to do much.
I think Mayo is gone after year 2 but I hold out the possibility that he will get a 3rd year because we were tanking.
Also, you continue to beat this drum and I get it, you're not happy Bill is gone (and would have been gone in a few years anyway, but his timeline was unfortunately accelerated) and you also can't seem to come to grips with the fact that the team came off last season in a state where they were so bad that literally no one wants to sign here.
I've already stated the issue with postseason incentives, which players absolutely want a shot at. And again, short of guaranteeing 100% of their salary and overpaying to the point of obscene, you're not going to sway a player who would prefer to be elsewhere.
You keep calling Kraft cheap and I get it, you don't like him. But adding logic to the equation given how players spurned us, I don't know what you believe the team could have done to convinced those elite guys to come here without sweetening the deals so much that now you look financially irresponsible while also sabotaging future negotiations with your own players.
Look at what Cleveland did,
as the lone prime example of a team offering a deal that was way too good to pass up to go to a bad football team. Deshaun Watson
absolutely didn't want to go there. So the Browns went to the extreme of guaranteeing his contract and paying him a deal so outrageous that you saw the following offseason with Lamar Jackson's deal that even the rest of the league went, "those guys were nuts, and that contract was ridiculous, we're not paying him (or any other player) that."
Imagine New England throwing out deals like that this offseason since guys didn't want to come here. I can only imagine the commentary on the money being thrown around, and then seeing it play out down the road when it came time to resign similar players. It would be an absolute mess. Look at Washington and the deals they threw around at one point. That formula doesn't work long-term. And you know that.
They were a terrible team heading into this offseason and it is what it is. Let's revisit this next April after they've hopefully gone all-in on the offensive line and really have a better nucleus around Maye, who will also hopefully be in a better spot coming off his rookie year.