The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

Smart ready to get more practice at juggling QBs

- Steve Hummer

Kirby Smart can ATHENS — recruit. He can brand-build like crazy. He’s an ever-burning forge, and his team is going to emerge as one pretty sturdy piece of metalwork just about every time.

He’s so good at so many of a head coach’s multiple tasks. But can he juggle? Looking back on how the Georgia coach tried to juggle quarterbac­ks Jake Fromm and Justin Fields, you might not want him throwing around chainsaws just yet. Stick to the oranges and pingpong balls. Otherwise, bring a tourniquet.

Smart’s restless roster got a big infusion of new talent Wednesday on early signing day. The nation’s top-ranked inside linebacker (Nakobe Dean) declared he will make the trip from Horn Lake, Miss., to Athens. They already had nailed down the top-ranked center (Clay Webb, who was smuggled across Nick Saban’s Alabama wall), and top-ranked defensive end (Nolan Smith). According to the 247Sports Composite, the Bulldogs have compiled the second-best recruiting class in the country. Second to you-know-who.

Is that really news anymore?

Like we said, the guy can recruit. Smart and his staff are going to land these bountiful classes right until the day they run out of honey to spin for some 5-star prospect and his family. Recruiting is their oxygen.

But on a day that is all about the comings in college football, so much of Wednesday at Georgia was about one particular going.

For this was the first time that anyone could get the head coach’s reaction to reports his backup quarterbac­k was in the “transfer portal,” which sounds like some doorway to another dimension, not just to Ohio State.

Smart said Wednesday that Fields was still on the Bulldogs’ practice field and still a part of the team’s Sugar Bowl plans. “I’m pleased with his work toward Texas and what he’s doing out there with us. He’s had a really good demeanor. Good reps and good competitio­n,” he said.

While saying Fields was weighing his options, Smart’s choice of words when talking about how quickly discussion­s fired up with another quarterbac­k signed by Georgia on Wednesday — Dwan Mathis, a 4-star from outside Detroit — would seem to indicate Fields’ future did not lie with the Bulldogs.

“We liked his athleticis­m and his arm motion. He’s got a really strong whip, he can pop the ball. We didn’t stay in communicat­ion the whole time from (this summer) to finding out Justin was leaving.”

Not “if ” Justin was leaving.

Backup quarterbac­ks are a big deal when you’re recruiting at the level Georgia is. Trying to keep them happy is only a problem for the most loaded of programs, where a 5-star talent like Fields can’t get on the field. Really, it’s a good problem, like trying to find just the right temperatur­e to keep both your prized red wines and your whites.

The topic of where Fields fit in the Bulldogs’ big picture was one Smart chewed on like an oily rag all season. He hated talking about it from the start, but he indulged a series of questions on the subject Wednesday.

On if the possible transfer would affect how Smart would use Fields in the Sugar Bowl: “We’re trying to figure out how to beat Texas, and we’re going to do everything we can to beat Texas. He decided he wanted to play in the Sugar Bowl, and I said absolutely, I want you there. He’s come to work and support his teammates.”

On whether the coach was annoyed by the situation, particular­ly the timing of when the story broke: “I can’t get annoyed. The kid’s doing what he thinks is best for him, he’s looking at it from his perspectiv­e. I respect that. The timing is what it is. There is no good time for that.

“From a recruiting perspectiv­e, it was challengin­g for us. Put yourself in the shoes of a kid trying to decide whether to come to Georgia as a quarterbac­k. You don’t know if (Fields) is going to be there or not, that makes it tough.”

On whether the Bulldogs would be working to change his mind between now and the bowl game: “I don’t think there’s anything you can do from that standpoint. He’s not foolish enough to fall victim to that. We’ve been very open and honest that we would like for him to stay, that we want to support him and his endeavors here and all the goals he came here to accomplish.”

Who knows if anyone — even Nick Saban — could have kept Fromm and Fields content. We do know that watching Smart try to was nothing less than pure torture at times. Peaking with the SEC Championsh­ip game, when Fields was inserted at the most inopportun­e times as if just to prove he was still wanted and needed. And then throwing the freshman to the wolves on a fake-punt play that may have been the century’s worst call.

As Fields was picking himself off the ground at Mercedes-Benz Stadium after that play, who could blame him if the word “transfer” may have been one of the first clean ones to come to his mind?

No, Smart was not much of a juggler in this case. But with the talent he continues to import to Athens, he’s going to have every chance to get much more adept at the art.

 ?? CURTIS COMPTON / CCOMPTON@AJC.COM ?? Bulldogs freshman quarterbac­k Justin Fields, who is expected to transfer, will still be the backup against Texas in the Sugar Bowl on Jan. 1.
CURTIS COMPTON / CCOMPTON@AJC.COM Bulldogs freshman quarterbac­k Justin Fields, who is expected to transfer, will still be the backup against Texas in the Sugar Bowl on Jan. 1.
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