A new coaching staff has been put into place, the defense has been much-improved, and several offensive weapons are now a year older and expected to be fully healthy. According to Pro Football Focus, however, that may not be enough to boost Washington Redskins quarterback Dwayne Haskins to a successful season in 2020; they’re still extremely worried about him following the career path closer to Josh Rosen rather than DeShaun Watson.

In a recent piece by Ben Linsey that was published earlier this week, PFF broke down some reasoning for why the Redskins are in desperate need of adding more help for Haskins on offense if they want him to get his career out of the muck in 2020. When painting a cautionary tale, both Rosen and Sam Darnold are brought up often.

I bring up those cases because it shows there is no set answer to how long a team will give a young quarterback, and similarly to Rosen and Darnold, Dwayne Haskins has what appears to be a brutal offensive environment in store for him in 2020 with the Washington Redskins. There were already those who wanted to bring in a free agent quarterback this offseason in Washington — perhaps reuniting Cam Newton with Ron Rivera. If Haskins falls flat in 2020 with the lack of talent around him, he might not get another chance.

After detailing just how much of a weapon second-year WR Terry McLaurin is, the article quickly touches on some uncertainty about both Steven Sims Jr., Kelvin Harmon, and Antonio Gandy-Golden. While fans in Washington have been taking in every route-running video from this offseason, the world at large still sees these players as unproven assets who wouldn’t count for wins just yet.

To fix this problem of a limited array of weapons, Linsey suggests that free agency additions are needed.

“If they don’t do anything to give Haskins more help, they’re doing it wrong. He is set up to fail in this offense as it is right now,” PFF’s Ben Linsey wrote.

Some candidates? Here are a few names that were mentioned:

WR Antonio Brown WR Josh Gordon WR Martavis Bryant LT Jason Peters LT Larry Warford

This isn’t purely an on-field decision, though. If that were the case, Brown would still be in Pittsburgh. There are off-field concerns that need to be weighed — as there is with other options such as Martavis Bryant and Josh Gordon — but the Redskins need more talent at wide receiver. Similarly, attacking high-level veteran options along the line, such as Jason Peters and Larry Warford, wouldn’t be a bad use of that remaining cap space.

There has been word from Ron Rivera that suggests the team is unlikely to sign Brown, but both Bryant and Gordon could be intriguing prospects down the road. As for the LT position, the team seems to feel confident in the players they plan to have compete for that spot in Saahdiq Charles, Geron Christian, or Cornelius Lucas.

In the end, whether or not Haskins has a successful season will come down to his own performance, and if he is able to take a step forward as a quarterback. It won’t be judged on whether or not the Redskins have a winning record or not, but rather if he is able to show poise as a passer, and his understanding of the offense and game at large is prevalent. If he can do that, and the rest of the players can be even average at worst, my bet is that Haskins will find his feet in the NFL.