Hey barbarian,
Tires are very rarely wrapped in shipping, at least to the shops. When I was working at a local shop here, even when we got a huge shipment for the beginning of the year, most of them were loose, or stacked on a pallet and the whole group lightly wrapped. (And those shipments usually come in between Jan and March) Just enough to hold them onto the pallet, and the tires themselves stick together more than they try to roll apart. That's fun I'll tell ya, getting a shipment of 300+ tires, and not having enough staff to get them dealt with and man the customers. Ah,.. the memories.
Plus, unless the tires were ordered in for you, they've likely been there for a bit. The BT-023 is a regular stock tire, they should have been replacing them as they sold them.
The only tires I saw wrapped individually were the OEM tires, I know you're not crazy enough to buy those. (Honda / Suzuki OEM, not just the oem replacement same model blah blah tires at 3 - 5 times the price.)
I'm glad you're starting to get along better with them. I know some people swore by them, some people hated them. I didn't like them. They never seemed as sticky or to have as nice a profile as some of the others, but they sold fairly well.
I heard one complaint about the Pilot Road 3s, they seemed to wear a lot faster than the PR2... possibly because of the sipes. They were still too new a tire by the time I left for a lot of feedback. The guy I talked to said the tire was well past done in 4K kms. So roughly 2500miles.
It's worth looking into the Pirelli AngelST too. I find the Pirellis tend to be a few bucks cheaper than the Dunlops / Bridgestones, and I've been getting phenomenal performance out of mine. I'm at about 10K kms, I removed the BT-020s that were on my bike within 1000kms, and they're just now starting to square a little. There's barely any wear at all. So, either I have tires for the next 15K, or they're going to self-destruct all at once. Great wet performance too. Too good the other half might say, because I'm pushing it a little more than he thinks I should in the wet.
Anyone who took my advice at the shop, usually came back to say they liked the AngelST as well. Oh! And Ducati uses them as an OE tire on some of their bikes.