
Weis may have had some recruiting holes in spots, but the roster he turned over to BK was way better than what Marcus inherited, at least on offense. Again, half our starters on offense this year were Freshmen last year, not to mention a number of rotation guys. These were Rees' guys from his first class, the lack of upperclassmen on offense was the ball being dropped by BK and Long. It's likely one of the reasons BK decided to skip town too, he saw the writing on the wall last year.
Freeman has Mayer who edges out Kyle Rudolph, but not by a whole lot. Rudolph is still playing on Sundays 11 years later. That's the only advantage I'd hands down give Freeman, although his Tackles may end up being Zack Martin good.
After that Floyd is far and away better than any WR we have today or any other WR BK recruited during his 12 years here. Riddick and TJ Jones were both young, but both would put up 1,000 yard careers in the future and be major players. Same with Eifert. Cierre Wood, Jonas Gray were good backs. Robert Hughes was a short yards guy and similar to Estime in ways. I would put those guys as comparable to our current backs or better in some cases. A healthy Dayne Crist played decent that year.
The point is, at least offensively, BK inherited a lot more talent and future talent than what he left Freeman, especially at skill positions. Marcus got a lot of youth and inexperience, and it's hard to maintain wins when most of your players on one side of the ball have only been in the program for a year or less. A healthy roster has almost all upperclassmen starting on both sides of the ball. We're seeing a lot of mental mistakes with false starts, ineligible man downfield, and illegal motion penalties, not to mention blown assignments.