Daily Camera (Boulder)

Alabama QB Milroe overcame naysayers

Told by former offensive coordinato­r O’brien he should switch positions

- By Greg Beacham The Associated Press

Jalen Milroe went to Alabama determined to become an elite SEC quarterbac­k, and nothing could deter him from his goal.

Not even, he says, his own offensive coordinato­r.

Milroe revealed Thursday that Bill O’brien, Alabama’s coordinato­r during Milroe’s first two seasons in Tuscaloosa, once suggested he should change positions.

“How would you feel if somebody told you you suck?” Milroe asked. “The biggest thing for me — be true to myself and stay the same. Nothing changed about me. I had an opportunit­y, and I seized it. There’s a bunch of positions I could have switched to, but look where I am now. So who gets the last laugh?”

That would be Milroe, who went on to become Bryce Young’s successor and a determined, highly competitiv­e quarterbac­k who has led the Crimson Tide all the way to the College Football Playoff. He has passed for 2,718 yards with 23 TD throws against just six intercepti­ons — but more importantl­y to Milroe, Alabama is on an 11-game winning streak.

Milroe’s resilience is the central theme of his college career, which began quietly behind Young. He won the Tide’s starting job this year, only to lose it in a Week 3 benching.

After he reclaimed it a week later, the Tide went on a roll that hasn’t always been pretty, but has resulted in an electrifyi­ng Iron Bowl win over Auburn, an SEC championsh­ip game upset of Georgia and a ticket to the Rose Bowl against unbeaten Michigan on Monday.

Milroe says he isn’t a finished product, and he has ample room to improve. But after those back-toback landmark victories, both the quarterbac­k and his Tide teammates are confident Milroe’s skills and resilience will give them a chance against the powerhouse Wolverines.

“I think the biggest thing was embracing hard,” Milroe said, echoing a phrase used by coach Nick Saban.

“For a quarterbac­k to succeed in the SEC and to play at an elite level, you have to embrace hard, because there are a lot of uncertaint­ies while you play the position, and you have to have the right, proper mindset,” Milroe added. “The biggest thing is having the right mental approach to the games, the week and everything that goes on with being a starting quarterbac­k, especially in the SEC. That’s the biggest thing, trying to learn as much as possible.”

Although Milroe prefers to pass, he’s an all-around athlete who can run aggressive­ly and physically. Michigan defensive coordinato­r Jesse Minter didn’t bite on comparison­s to NFL star Lamar Jackson, but said Milroe is a major dual threat.

“It’s not like a quarterbac­k that’s scrambling and he’s going to slide and make sure you don’t hit him so you don’t get a penalty,” Minter said. “This dude is going to run like a legit tailback or like a legit slot receiver once he’s in space.”

Along with his obvious skills, Milroe has developed a reputation as a tenacious competitor who wills his team forward. He etched that determinat­ion into Alabama lore when the stepped up in the final minute of the Iron Bowl and threw a miraculous touchdown pass to Isaiah Bond on fourth-and-31.

“I went home for the holidays, and that’s all I heard,” Milroe said with a grin. “Being around family (saying), ‘What was going through your mind on that play?’ Well, you had to be there.”

Milroe beat out two contenders for the starting job last summer, but it lasted only until Week 2, when a two-intercepti­on performanc­e in the Tide’s home loss to Texas prompted Saban to bench him.

When both of his backups struggled, the benching lasted only one week. After cheering from the sideline, Milroe returned and promptly led Alabama to a win over Ole Miss.

“I took it as a learning moment,” Milroe said. “Looked in the mirror. Figured out some things I need to improve on. At the end of the day, it’s all about being the right teammate, being the best teammate I can be. I lean on the FAMILY acronym: Forget About Me, I Love You. That was critical when I went into that week . ... When it was an opportunit­y for someone else to play, I was just trying to be the best teammate I can be.”

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