ATLANTA — Monday, I’ll admit it. I was a bit lost.

It was my first time experiencing SEC Media Days, and at the new venue, I spent half the time just trying to get a feel for the layout and the schedule of how things work.

Tuesday, though, I was like a 15-year veteran, knowing exactly where to be and when.

OK, maybe not yet.

But I did find some interesting little tidbits from my day in Atlanta that you might find entertaining.

Jacob Eason is still at Georgia apparently

This was my favorite moment of the day. Let me preface this by saying I’ve made mistakes asking questions, and I’ve been corrected by subjects. I’m far from perfect.

But a reporter asking Kirby Smart about having Jacob Eason, Justin Fields and Jake Fromm in the same quarterback room is, um, rough. Really rough.

Smart played it off.

“Yeah. If we had all three of them, we’d be sitting pretty good,” Smart said. “Eason is gone. He transferred.”

I mean, if this were 1885 and we only got big college football information via horses delivering newspapers, it would have been a fair hiccup. Who knows? We might have had some breaking news from Smart.

“Uh, yeah. Eason transferred to Washington. We’re waiting on a letter from him to hear if he safely made the cross-country voyage.”

Instead, Smart broke the news to the reporter in a nicer way than I would have. Smart informed him about the thing that we all knew 7 months ago because the internet exists.

Actually, somebody break some news to that reporter that the internet exists.

Bow tie Dawgs seem to be in agreement on something else

“You can do anything you set your mind to,” said every teacher/parent ever.

I’m mostly a believer in that. I set some goals in life and accomplished a few of them.

But I don’t care how hard I set my mind to it. I’m NEVER going to have as much swag as Georgia safety J.R. Reed did on Tuesday:

Sunglasses inside is bold. In fact, it’s so bold that he actually took them off about 2 seconds after I took that picture. What you also can’t see is that Reed is rocking a massive SEC Championship ring on his right hand. That, plus the bow tie is making a statement.

In fact, every Georgia representative rocked the bow tie in Atlanta. Usually there isn’t much coordination between player outfits, but that felt a bit coordinated.

What also felt coordinated was what Georgia players said about 2nd-and-26. That is, they moved on immediately after the game. Reed and Smart both said that it’s something that the media makes a bigger deal of than it actually is.

“It’s not discussed at all. We’re players. We’re not fans, so we don’t get hung up on things like that. We’ve gotta move on to the next play. We’ve gotta move on to the next game. There’s always something else,” Reed said. “You can’t get hung up on a play that was in the national championship. We can’t do anything about that. That’s in the past.”

Sorry if we’re not sick of talking about the most stunning national championship ending ever just 7 months after the fact. As sick as Georgia players are of hearing about it, it’s still a play that will live on in history. And until games actually begin, it’s still going to dominate the conversation.

Smart actually said that he was watching “Get Up” Tuesday morning and he was surprised that they showed 2nd-and-26 instead of the SEC Championship. Really? That would’ve been like me assuming Georgia players were going to show up at SEC Media Days in sweat pants. We would’ve both been wrong. Very wrong.

Dan Mullen’s curveball and what it could mean

I try not to take preseason schematic talk too seriously because we really won’t know what a team runs until we see it. As in, I’ll wait to call South Carolina the “Oregon 2.0” until I actually see what Bryan McClendon has cooking.

So when I heard Mullen say this about his offense, it made me think a bit:

That’s interesting. Last year, Mullen’s offense didn’t exactly specialize in throwing the deep ball. It wasn’t a big part of the offense because it wasn’t Nick Fitzgerald’s strength. I’d argue it wasn’t really Dak Prescott’s strength, either.

You know who does throw a nice deep ball? Feleipe Franks. Well, he at least has the most ability to throw the deep ball based on what we’ve seen from Kyle Trask. I predicted that Trask would win the starting job because of his ability to make the proper reads at the line of scrimmage and execute the intermediate throws.

But a comment like that makes me believe that maybe Mullen his higher on Franks than I am.

Would Mullen have made a comment like that if Florida’s quarterbacks were more mobile than he thought? No, because he said Florida’s offense will not be what MSU ran. MSU, of course, ran a whole lot of zone reads with Fitzgerald because that was his strength.

Was Mullen just throwing a curveball by suggesting that the Gators will be more pass-happy than his past offenses? Perhaps.

Either way, he put my brain in a pretzel.

Florida players knew how predictable their offense was last year

Speaking of Florida’s offense, they knew it was a train wreck under Jim McElwain. They saw what the rest of us did — it was about as predictable as can be.

In fact, Martez Ivey said that he had friends who knew nothing about football who knew what Florida was going to run about “95 percent of the time.”

I was curious how someone on the defensive side of the ball felt about that so I asked David Reese what he felt about Florida’s predictable, McElwain offense.

“I’ve got an aunt that tells me that all the time,” Reese said. “She said, ‘It makes me mad watching that. I knew it was going to be a power.’ I said, ‘That’s not my side of the ball.’ I try to stay in my lane, but I definitely heard that before.”

Needless to say, Reese’s aunt won’t be calling out plays in Mullen’s offense.

“Yeah,” Reese said. “I feel good about that.”

The Hawaiian quarterback vs. Hawaiian quarterback matchup that suddenly sounds awesome

Lost in the hoopla of Tua Tagovailoa’s emergence and Shea Patterson’s transfer from Ole Miss was that there’s a decent chance we’re going to see something pretty awesome in 2018 — Hawaiian QB vs. Hawaiian QB in the SEC.

Tagovailoa vs. Jordan Ta’amu has sneaky potential to be the best quarterback vs. quarterback matchup in the SEC in 2018 (Relax, Mizzou fans. I said “sneaky.”)

The cool thing about the fraternity of Hawaiian SEC quarterbacks is that it’s a tight-knit bunch.

“Our relationship is great,” Ta’amu told CBS 42. “We trained with each other when we were younger, just growing up, me, him, his brother and his dad. We would always go out in the park and train with the kids. Him being a fellow Samoan guy out here in the SEC with me is amazing. I just want to wish him the best. I’m just excited to play against Alabama, hopefully, he’s the starting quarterback so it’ll be Hawaii vs. Hawaii. Hopefully our family and our friends would watch that game. I’m excited, and I know he’s excited.”

Ole Miss vs. Alabama matchups are usually plenty of fun (with the exception of last year), though watching two Hawaiian quarterbacks play in a shootout would certainly be a new chapter in the rivalry.

There’s certainly been a wave of Hawaiian quarterbacks in college football. Hawaii native and UCF signal-caller McKenzie Milton finished eighth in the Heisman Trophy voting last year and is one of the top returning quarterbacks in the country. Tagovailoa’s brother is also verbally committed to Alabama.

Perhaps Tagovailoa vs. Ta’amu will be one of many Hawaiian QB vs. Hawaiian QB matchups to come.

My suggestion to Hjlalte Froholdt

I often find myself so locked in with what a player is saying at media days that I sort of lose track of time.

Froholdt, a Denmark native and Arkansas offensive lineman, fascinated me. He talked about coming to America when he was a sophomore in high school, sports in Denmark and, of course, beer.

“I’m 21, so I can say that we love beer in Denmark. Huge fans of beer,” Froholdt said. “Hey, go to Denmark or Germany and get some good beer. Honestly, good time. Down by the beach or out on the harbor — we love our ships — or something, having a good beer. Nothing beats that. That’s my main culture.”

I was curious if Chad Morris, a Texas native who spent the majority of his life in the Lone Star State, had learned how to speak any Danish.

“Not yet. But I think it’ll come eventually,” Froholdt said.

I pressed him on that. Has Froholdt suggested that Morris swap out a few of those Red Bulls that he loves so much with a couple beers?

“Hey, we love our Red Bulls too back in Denmark,” Froholdt said. “Honestly, we go together real great.”

Perhaps Morris has more Danish in him than he realized.