Couldn't really disagree more tbh. Drummer is fine but Toontrack is in another stratosphere. The drum sounds themselves are done quite well with Drummer, the drum choices/tuning/tones/micing are good. That should be expected though and largely isn't what separates your average Kontakt library to something like Superior. The handling of MIDI in Drummer isn't all that, its almost a requirement to conert the track to MIDI (which lets face it, it IS a MIDI track all along) because you can't get things written close enough without getting stuck in. And the step editor in Logic isn't really as good as the dedicated (cubase style) grid editors like Superior has built in. Toontracks MIDI search to find and MIDI libraries are much more powerful than what Drummer can do, which I'd say is good for quick demos but quite restrictive for anything precise.
Logic's Pultec/1073/1176's etc are just fine, but again, 3rd party companies are doing way more thorough and complex modelling. They're good enough to do the job but they're not setting the pace in any way at all.
I would say that Logic's audio editing is a serious drawback compared to other DAW's and does actually make it hard to make the most pristine recordings possible. You can just about fudge the editing together but its unpredictable and not accurate enough to depend on for very serious audio editing work. Logic's handling of playlists/take folders/VCA's/groups has also become extremely messy and can make features that SHOULD make work simple more complicated than it needs to be. I could do the work I needed to do in Logic, but it was cumbersome, longwinded, unpredictable and significantly worse than me just switching to Pro Tools, where I've been ever since.
Logic clearly has a lot going for it, and it absolutely gets used by a number of professionals. But despite what loyal followers of any other DAW say, there is a reason why Pro Tools is the no.1 choice for most audio professionals.