I disagree about the big field of DNC people being necessarily a good thing. It may work itself out if they whittle themselves down to a reasonable number(less than 10?) soon enough. We're at 15 candidates declared right now, of which 9 are getting reasonable amounts of attention and 7 have gotten significant amounts of media talk.
And there are certainly more to come. That's not even counting the people like Beto O'Rourke who are almost certain to be in the race, have gotten plenty of attention, but haven't formally declared yet.
This is prime to be another 2016 RNC Primary. Already I'm having a hard time keeping track of the choices. Klobuchar, Gillibrand and Harris all just kind of run together for me. Gabbard probably would too if not for the veteran angle and the minor scandal that's come up lately. Warren is almost entirely "gets in spats with Trump" and "acts even more out of touch than Clinton did." these days. Delaney, Booker, Castro and Buttigieg, I have no clue about other than Booker likes to grandstand and Castro is a twin.(And some people jokingly(?) think that would be a problem.)
I'm just waiting for the loud outsider to jump in and take all the attention. Maybe it's Bloomberg. Maybe it's O'Rourke. Maybe it's someone we haven't seen yet. Maybe they'll be loud, attention grabbing, AND competent and worrying is for nothing. But just given recent history, having a field this large, with this many "you're who again?" candidates... is potentially not a great thing.
The one good thing I'll say is that most of them seem like ok choices next to Trump... But I'm not ruling out a third party vote just yet. Still plenty of time for the party to screw this one up too.