They’ve won all five games by at least 14 points, and have never trailed in a game for even a single second. That’s how dominant the 5-0 and No. 2-ranked Georgia Bulldogs have been this season.

Oh, they haven’t been perfect, not by any means. But they’ve been close. They are ranked No. 2 for a reason, because they haven’t looked quite as awesome as No. 1 Alabama has, but they’ve looked better than everyone else in the country. And that’s everyone.

They have done so by deftly handling what could be a toxic quarterback situation. Sophomore Jake Fromm, the hero from a National Championship Game run a year, has remained the starter and is one of the most efficient quarterbacks in the country. Freshman Justin Fields, the No. 2 recruit in the country, has seen action now and then, and played well when he’s had the chance.

There has been no bickering, not like at Alabama. There has been no quitting on teammates, not like former Clemson quarterback Kelly Bryant, who walked out on his Clemson pals in the middle of a season and left them high and dry while they’re trying to win a conference and national championship of their own.

At Georgia, there has always been rhyme to the reason. Fromm has been the guy, and Fields has gotten his taste. Fields has played a good bit in the blowouts, but when games have been on the line still, it’s always been Fromm behind center.

Until Saturday.

Fields, who played a little in the South Carolina game and hardly at all in the 14-point win at Missouri, played a major role in Georgia’s 38-12 win at Tennessee that actually got close for a while. He came in for a play at the start of the second quarter, and another play on a subsequent drive. He was a big part of two other scoring drives, mostly with his legs. He threw only two passes, but rushed for 45 yards on five carries, with two of those runs ending scoring drives.

He provided a boost.

Georgia coach Kirby Smart switched Fromm and Fields and back six times on one drive during the fourth-quarter drive that ended Tennessee’s comeback hopes. His quarterback juggling act is not scripted, he said.

“The plan is, there is no plan.”

In either case, it still seems to be working. Fromm has above-average numbers — he’s completing 72.5 percent of his passes and has 9 touchdown passes to just 2 interceptions. More important, he’s getting points out of most of his drives, running the offense well, with precision and poise.

Most important, he’s stepped back when he’s had to and let Fields do his thing. He has not even said one peep and taken the high road at every turn. He could complain, but he doesn’t. Fields could complain even louder, and he doesn’t either.

They are teammates with a common goal, and that’s refreshing.

That didn’t happen at Alabama in the offseason, and it was testy. It didn’t happen this fall at Clemson and blew up in their face when Bryant quit and freshman Trevor Lawrence, the nation’s top recruit just ahead of Fields, got hurt in the first game after Bryant quit.

At least Alabama coach Nick Saban had a plan. Maybe he wasn’t good at sharing it well with the media — never a Saban concern — but he always knew the outcome, that Tua Tagovailoa was the better quarterback and he needed to start ahead of Jalen Hurts. At Clemson, Dabo Swinney chose to let it play out in an even competition, and when Lawrence edged ahead, Bryant simply quit. Shameless.

Smart is simply going by feel, and it’s been Fromm’s team from the get-go. Fields got a good taste Saturday, but it’s more for what he has to offer as opposed to Fromm failing to meet a certain standard. Sure, Fromm missed a few throws against Tennessee and maybe made a bad decision or two, but he’s still been very good overall. He’s set a high bar, but they can all do better.

Even Fromm thinks so, in a bigger picture.

“It goes back to the standard we have as Georgia football. We obviously didn’t play as well as we wanted to, didn’t put up as many points as we wanted to,” Fromm said Saturday. “Didn’t quite play to the standard. Kind of sloppy. Didn’t execute as much as wanted to on offense.”

There is more to it that Fields being a better option than Fromm. Twitter trolls aside, Fromm is getting things done and Fields adds a nice diversion, especially with his legs.

Credit: Dale Zanine-USA TODAY Sports

The argument is this: When push comes to shove, is Fromm the best option to win the big games that matter? What have we possibly seen thus far from Fromm that makes us doubt that? What we know about Fromm, based on a year-plus of live action on several huge stages, is that he can get the job done.

What we know about Fields is that he has enormous potential. We already know he can run, but we don’t know if he can complete huge passes with the pressure on. Not yet. We think we know — and the Twitter morons are sure they know — but the only way we know for sure is to watch it play out.

Smart might joke that there is no plan, but there probably is one, safely under lock and key. My guess is that this job will remain with Fromm, but that Fields will continue to get more tastes of important action the next few weeks. Maybe even a lot more.

It’s a choice between what we know and what we don’t know. Not yet.

Can Georgia win a national championship? Sure, there’s a chance, but let’s be real about one thing. This Alabama team has once-in-a-generation kind of talent. Fromm could play great and still not beat them, not in December in the SEC Championship Game and maybe not again in the College Football Playoff.

Fields could play great and the result might be the same.

For know, Fromm gives Georgia the best chance to run the table. Fields can do things, but we still don’t know — at least not yet, anyway — if Fields can do it all.

Smart has been right about everything so far. Let’s see how long the “so far” lasts.