Chattanooga Times Free Press

Former Georgia players planning ‘healing’ event

- BY CHIP TOWERS

ATHENS — A couple of former Georgia football players — one of them an active NFL player — believe they have a solution to the “sadness and darkness” that has enveloped the University of Georgia campus in the wake of recent tragedies.

Jake Camarda, a punter for Tampa Bay Buccaneers, and Josh Moran, a UGA law student who was Camarda’s teammate when he played for the Georgia Bulldogs, have teamed up with a campus ministry group to organize something they’re calling “Unite Georgia.” The free event, scheduled to take place on the night of April 3 at Stegeman Coliseum on the UGA campus, invites “as many people as we can possibly get there” for a night of Christian worship, prayer and motivation­al speaking.

“Something really, really special is coming to Athens,” said Camarda, who earned AllAmerica­n honors while playing for the Bulldogs from 2018-21. “Like, we want everybody there. I joked with Josh about how coach (Kirby) Smart, when he first got here, he had ‘93K Day’ for the spring game. That’s what we are envisionin­g, for this event to be something big like that.”

Not including floor space, Stegeman Coliseum seats only 10,523, but Camarda’s point is well taken. They intend to pack the house.

That the event will take place barely a month after one of the worst weeks in UGA history is a coincidenc­e. Two UGA students died in separate incidents, including the first murder on campus in more than 20 years, according to police. Nursing student Laken Riley, 22, was killed while jogging near UGA’s intramural fields Feb. 22. UGA freshman Wyatt Banks, 19, died a day earlier at Brumby Hall. A suspect was arrested in Riley’s death and charged with murder.

“Not to use those tragedies in any way, but there is a sadness and darkness on campus and this would be something that, if you’re looking for some hope or community, we sincerely would love to have you there and pray over you, be with you, worship with you,” said Moran, a first-year law student from Alpharetta. “As absolutely horrible as that is, we do want to bring some light into what is probably one of the darker times that we’ve ever had in Athens.”

Said Camarda: “It is a sad time, especially when you look at the past couple of years at Georgia and everything that has happened with some tragedies and death.”

Camarda referenced the fatal crash that took the lives of a Georgia football player and athletics department employee and injured two others on Jan. 15, 2023. He said the news of Riley’s death broke just hours after he and Moran went public with their plans for Unite Georgia.

“That was just crazy,” Camarda said. “Here we are announcing something that’s going to come to Athens and hopefully spark revival in a city that needs it. Then we find out a couple of hours later that something so terrible had happened.”

The actual planning for Unite Georgia began weeks ago. It was inspired by an event called “Unite Auburn,” which was held last September on that campus and drew nearly 10,000 people to Neville Arena. Organized by Tonya Prewett, the wife of Auburn assistant basketball coach Chad Prewett, that event resulted in more than 1,000 individual­s being baptized in a nearby lake. Many of the baptisms were performed by men’s basketball coach Bruce Pearl, football coach Hugh Freeze and baseball coach Butch Thompson.

Georgia’s event will offer a similar program. It will include live music performed by Atlanta-based Passion Music and Christian messages delivered by New York Times bestsellin­g author Jennie Allen and Harris Creek (Texas) pastor Jonathan Pokluda, who is also an author and hosts a popular podcast for young adults. Camarda and Moran also will have roles.

Tonya Prewett is credited with founding the “Unite movement.” Her non-profit Unite Us is headquarte­red in Auburn and has a website that explains its mission.

“They’re kind of facilitati­ng things,” Moran said. “They have connection­s everywhere and that is very helpful. They’re the ones who help bring in the speakers and the band and do a lot of the grunt work.”

Their athletic journeys are quite different. Moran was a walk-on receiver from Milton High who had to transfer to New Mexico State as a senior to finally earn some athletic financial aid. He was injured there, however, and transferre­d to Delaware, where he finally got some real game action for the Blue Hens. He caught five passes for 61 yards on offense and recorded six tackles and a forced fumble playing on special teams.

But Moran made academic honor roll every semester throughout all his stops. He was accepted into UGA’s law school last fall with undergradu­ate and graduate degrees in business and finance.

“After my last year at Delaware, I was, like, ‘OK, I have to grow up now,’” Moran said with a chuckle. “I really enjoy school.”

Camarda’s athletic road has been decidedly different. He was highly recruited out of Norcross High and earned the job as Georgia’s starting punter as a freshman. Playing in every game of his collegiate career, Camarda earned All-American and All-SEC honors with the Bulldogs, left as the career record holder in punting and earned a national championsh­ip ring on the 2021 team.

Last year, Camarda averaged 50.05 yards on 77 punts for the Bucs. Two weeks ago, he married the former Kinsley Barga at a ceremony in Chattanoog­a.

“I’ve been very blessed,” he said humbly.

Now, Camarda and Moran are hoping they can bless others through something that started mostly on a whim.

“The goal is simply to bring light back into the city, and it definitely needs that right now,” Camarda said.

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