Georgia offensive coordinator Jim Chaney has enough coaching experience to know what the media wants to talk about in fall camp.

This year it’s no secret that the Bulldogs’ quarterback battle between Jake Fromm and Justin Fields is at the top of the list. When asked about the two signal callers, he cut the question off and began to answer before the reporter was finished.

“We all know how polarizing the quarterback position can be,” Chaney said Saturday during the Bulldogs media day. “Everybody wants to know about that spot. In my particular role, I worry about everybody. Every good football player you have you find ways to get them on the field to utilize them.”

For Fields, that could mean his ability to run the ball. During his two seasons as a starter in high school, he totaled 2,096 yards and 28 touchdowns on the ground.

“I don’t know that you walk out and say because Justin Fields can run, he is a running quarterback,” Chaney said. “I think Justin Fields is a fantastic quarterback. He happens to be able to run. That’s a good thing. Designing a playbook directly because he can run, I think that would be distorting who we want to be as a football team. But it has given us some different things that we can open up in the playbook. It does open some pages to it. As far as strategy goes, it’s another skillset that we have available to us to use anytime we want to.”

As the No. 1 dual-threat quarterback in the 2018 class, there is no doubt Georgia wants to get him on the field. Kirby Smart has already said they have no intent to redshirt him.  As a rusher last season, Fromm had just 79 yards on 55 attempts. If Fields is going to see playing time and Georgia wants to use both, it appears Chaney might choose Fields’ as a run threat in certain situations.

“We think about it all the time,” Chaney said. “Justin’s ability to run the ball is exceptional, but we don’t have a vast amount of depth at that position right now. If you start running quarterbacks, you’re putting them in harm’s way a little bit more. You have to be real conscious of that.”