Is this your final summation, "Escambria'94's Ultimate Summation: Gators '10, and Their Future"?
OK, E-, here's what I think: This was your "optimistic version".
Now, baring in mind your "pessimistic version" (I won't demand to see it now, but I KNOW--and YOU know--you have one close-at-hand; I've SEEN it, also spread "throughout this forum"), I suggest you give us your "realistic version". Some folks (the "half empty"-folks, like me?) might maintain that that's the same as a pessimistic one, but I don't think that in this case. At the same time, "what should be" is beside the point: a certain portion of the above list you know just isn't what's going to happen, given the people involved.
I DO want to give you props for managing as upbeat and even-handed a view in the context of the disappointment that you outlined leading up to it--you were not alone in any of it, of course. Even after coming into August convinced that we were "in transition" and would "likely lose 3 games this season" (I wasn't so "right" even then, believing that this would be part of a "growing together as a team" that would leave us "dangerous, no one wanting to play us by the end of the year"--HA!), I too bought into all that talk (the themes you cover in your first paragraph) from Gator Central and the preseason rags. I knew we were in trouble by halftime of Game 1 against Miami (Ohio), though; I kept thinking, "All that time, spring and summer and 2-a-days thru' August and this team shows up not-ready-to-play?" In fact, "unprepared" is the one constant throughout this past season, our "identity" on offense, really, now that I think of it.
Oh well. "They" will either do something about it or "they" won't (the quotes are there 'cause I'm leaving it open, my last vestige of optimism in this matter--it is still up to Meyer whether the OC will be Addazio, someone new brought in, or Meyer himself...we live and hope).
Taking a page from you and others in the last couple of days, I'm turning my attention to the defense. With a couple of timely recruits and the talent we already have about to really begin to assert themselves, with better coaching this could be a very strong unit, eventually able to dominate in true SEC style. THAT kind of "D" can mask a lot of deficiencies on offense--give even THIS year's offense the ball back over and over again via turnovers and 3-and-outs and eventually they'll roll over the opponent's exhausted defense, instead of ours. That IS one formula for success in the SEC: strong special teams, dominant, stifling defense and a serviceable offense that doesn't turn the ball over, and you win. Often. I read that somewhere. Someone's "Plan", or something.