The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

1960s Bulldogs football star, noted state court judge dies at age 72

- By Chip Towers chip.towers@ajc.com

ATHENS — Kent Lawrence will be remembered for the great plays he made as a dynamic football player for the Georgia Bulldogs, but his greatest impact came in decades on the bench as a judge in Athens-Clarke County.

Lawrence, who starred for the Bulldogs in the 1960s, died in Athens on Friday morning after an extended illness. He was 72.

As a judge, Lawrence presided over State Court from 1985 until his retirement in 2011 and was the founder of the Athens-Clarke County’s DUI/Drug Court, which was the first of its kind in the state of Georgia and one of the first nationwide.

Georgia football fans are more likely to recall Lawrence for the many highlights he produced wearing the No. 24 jersey for Vince Dooley from 1965-68. As the Bulldogs’ starting tailback for the 1966 SEC Championsh­ip team, Lawrence recorded an 87-yard kickoff return against VMI, a 70-yard punt return vs. Georgia Tech and a 74-yard TD run against SMU in the Cotton Bowl. Lawrence was named the MVP of that Cotton Bowl as he rushed for 149 yards to set the UGA bowl rushing record that stood for 25 years. He was inducted into the Cotton

Bowl Hall of Fame in 2003.

On the 1968 team, which also won an SEC championsh­ip, Lawrence played halfback, split end and flanker catching 35 passes for 491 yards and four touchdowns. Following his college career, he played with the Falcons and Philadelph­ia Eagles of the NFL.

Lawrence earned bachelor’s and master’s degrees in education from UGA. After football, Lawrence earned his law degree from the Woodrow Wilson College of Law at Oglethorpe University.

The Judge Kent Lawrence Football Scholarshi­p Endowment recently was establishe­d to honor Lawrence.

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