There are many attributes that make up a player and some are significantly ignored. Here is one of them:
Situational awareness and self-discipline.
Tell me the last time that DJ Dallas fumbled near his own red zone, caused a penalty that negated a touchdown, taunted the opposing bench to wipe out a first down, fielded a punt inside his own ten yard line, or stepped out of bounds one yard shy of a first down? Yea....that's what I thought. You can't tell me. This just in, unforced errors are a HUGE part of a player's game.
By all means, let's make room for some athletic freak that can't keep his head in the game at crunch time. While we are at it, let's revisit the concept of what "making your teammates better" actually means and tell me who the JAG really is here. Does killing momentum with bonehead mistakes while filling your teammates with self-doubt disqualify a player from "JAG" status, or not? Should such a person ever really be included in the overused "making his teammates better" category? Let me clue you all in. The best way to "make your teammates better" is with situational awareness and self-discipline. It starts with leading by example, by showing the importance of mental maturity. DJ Dallas makes his teammates better.