I'm really not, though. The only 2 players in the deal who had played even one game in the majors were Wood and Paco. Wood put up (if you average Fangraphs and BR) a little over 3 WAR last year in 24 starts and had over 2 WAR in 20 starts this year at the time of the trade. So I think it's safe to call him about a 3-4 WAR player over a full season at the major league level. He had already proven himself. Paco had proven himself to be about a 1 WAR or slightly better player over the course of a full season but had significant injury issues that showed themselves the last couple of years and robbed him of pretty much any value in that time frame.
So given what they've shown over the last 3 years, Wood is a 3-4 WAR player and Paco is likely a 1 WAR player but less likely to give you that than Wood. Those are just facts.
Projecting anything for Peraza, Olivera, or Bird is pure speculation. The Dodgers clearly win the deal in terms of proven assets, and I think it's fair to project Peraza at 1-3 WAR and Olivera at 2-4. Peraza is likely to be around the 2 WAR level, and Olivera, if healthy, should be around 3 or perhaps a little more based on his offensive scouting report. The problem is, Olivera is far less likely to play a full season than Peraza, which could bring the value there close to even.
And Bird is a total unknown. Projecting a guy outside the Dodgers' top 10 prospects as basically a 1 WAR player is a little much to me.
So the Dodgers clearly win on proven assets, and you can really argue that we could win the speculative assets, but you could also argue that will come out about even. If you're going to clearly lose a deal on proven assets, you have to clearly win on speculative assets, and we didn't.