The below-linked article from Saturday Down South provided a fair evaluation of JM. I've quoted some points I agree with:
Negatives
“In a Playoff game, a starting quarterback who throws for 5 yards per pass attempt with 6 sacks taken is going to end up on the losing side 9 times out of 10.”
“Milroe never really found his go-to receiver. That has to change. … The Tide didn’t have an advantage to turn to in the passing game … because Milroe is still developing as a precision passer.”
“Maybe it’s not in the cards for Milroe to develop into a guy who can pick apart a defense .… but that area has to be more consistent in 2024. It would make that Alabama passing game tougher to defend.”
“Against Michigan, Milroe was 1-for-3 on passes that traveled between 11-20 yards beyond the line of scrimmage, and on the season, he only completed 38 passes on 69 attempts in that range. That’s essentially an average of 3-for-5 in that spot, and with 38 of those passes being deemed off-target."
Positives
“The offensive line has to get better in pass protection and it would help if Milroe had a clue where those snaps were going … mproved center play will allow Milroe to get into his reads quicker.”
“Alabama doesn’t need to turn into the Air Raid; it needs to be able to adjust when it faces a team like Michigan that has dominant interior defensive linemen with disciplined linebackers. The Tide didn’t have an advantage to turn to in the passing game, in part because it didn’t have receivers who could consistently separate, but also because Milroe is still developing as a precision passer.”
“What we did see in 2023 was a borderline starter transform into a guy who finished No. 6 in the Heisman Trophy voting. Don’t let Milroe’s struggles against an elite Michigan defense — one that Alabama OL Tyler Booker declared was the best in the nation — overshadow what he became.”
https://www.saturdaydownsouth.com/a...zYqbXpfPZWDdrTbkACfflzWQ9sD7rqfC6qYCh61s-7yb8