Moving on from BB was 100% correct by the way.
I agree that moving on from BB was the right move, but IMO they did it a year too soon. I think they would have been better off letting Bill play out his contract, draft and develop Maye, and look for a better coaching solution with a full year of planning. At that point, the team under Bill with Maye probably would have had a better record and would have looked more attractive to more seasoned and savvy GM's, head coaches, and coordinators (or upstart coordinators looking to become head coaches). Locking up Mayo as Bill's successor was not a smart move. Jerod wasn't close to ready to being a head coach. The rest of the front office and coaching debacle fell into place after that decision . . . and now they are in a really tough spot.
But they didn't do that with Bill, so they are looking at having to clean house again. We've seen the gross limitations of the current staff and front office, and having them all back next year would border on criminal negligence. They run the risk of doing to Maye what they did to Mac Jones (a different OC and scheme every season). If they kept Bill around, they would have cut one regime out of the rebuild and likely would have accelerated the team's journey to respectability and competitiveness. That's difficult to prove or disprove, but that's what I think would have happened with a final year of BB.
Bottom line, they are in quicksand and sinking without a good path to extricate themselves. I know the wannabee internet GM's have things all mapped out in drafting can't miss players, signing the top free agents, and making trades for peak producers. Realistically, that is unlikely to happen (they've been able to do those things the past 5 years and did very little).
It was a joy watching McConkey go for 100 yards and 2 TDs knowing you have Polk over there in the corner eating crayons. Keep Mayo if you must but I want Wolf nowhere near this draft.
I've seen this sentiment in several places, but the chances that McConkey would have put up the same numbers in NE as he did for LAC would have been close to zero. The situations and environment in Los Angeles and New England couldn't be more different. IMO, McConkey may have put up similar numbers to Douglas (60-600-3). Even a true superstar like Jefferson or Chase would have struggled to get to 1,000 receiving yards. Look at Hill for the Dolphins. When things don't work well, even an explosive receiver will have a minimal impact and won't produce big numbers.