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Alcohol, cash used in UGA football recruiting, court filing alleges
Attorneys for former UGA recruiting analyst Tory Bowles allege football staff regularly drove recruits and families after drinking.
Caption
Credit: Olivia Bowdoin
INVESTIGATIONS
By Dylan Jackson
3 hours ago
Attorneys representing a former University of Georgia football recruiting analyst injured in a crash involving alcohol that killed two members of the program say coaches and staffers regularly drove UGA athletic association rental vehicles after drinking.
The attorneys also allege that UGA’s coaches spent cash during unofficial recruiting visits. Such spending by coaches may have violated NCAA rules, according to court papers filed on Thursday.
The allegations are part of an amended complaint in a lawsuit filed against the athletic association and others by former Georgia recruiting staffer Victoria “Tory” Bowles. Her attorneys allege alcohol and coaches’ cash helped lubricate Georgia’s powerhouse recruiting machine.
“My client’s iPhone survived the crash fully intact and contains thousands of pages of recruiting texts describing the inner workings of UGA’s recruiting activities,” Bowles’ attorney Rob Buck said in a statement. “The new texts included in the Amended Complaint establish that the Association was fully aware recruiting staffers were regularly allowed to drive recruits and their families around Athens after drinking alcohol at Association sponsored events.”
The new allegations represent another salvo in the bitter lawsuit between Bowles and her former employer, the UGA athletic association, and come days before the one year anniversary of the Jan. 15 crash that killed Georgia recruiting analyst Chandler LeCroy, who was driving, and offensive lineman Devin Willock, a passenger. Bowles, a passenger in the vehicle, was severely injured. The UGA athletic association on Thursday pushed back about the new assertions by Bowles’ legal team.
Caption
Credit: Compilation
“We are reviewing the amended complaint, but we dispute its claims and will vigorously defend the Athletic Association’s interests in court,” said Steven Drummond, an executive associate athletic director with the UGA athletic association.
Other staffers mentioned by name in the lawsuit could not immediately be reached for comment.
The information included in the updated filing sheds additional light on other aspects of UGA’s football operations, such as the role of UGA athletic association staffer Bryant Gantt, who reported directly to Head Coach Kirby Smart on the program’s org chart and was widely known for having influence with law enforcement.
The filing includes 11 text messages to bolster the various claims. In one such exchange in June 2021, former UGA football staffer Matt Godwin told other staff he was directed by “Cochran,” presumably Georgia special teams coordinator Scott Cochran, to entertain an offensive lineman from another school.
“Cochran told me I gotta get Mitch Zoloty f*****d up tonight so gonna head downtown for a celebratory beer if anyone would like to join,” according to the text quoted in the complaint.
Caption
Credit: HYOSUB SHIN / AJC
Bowles’ attorneys add she is unaware of any enforced prohibition on driving athletic association rental vehicles after drinking alcohol. The filing does not provide any evidence that coaches and staffers were intoxicated when they drove recruits and their families.
The allegations address the heart of Bowles’ lawsuit, filed in Gwinnett County state court, which hinges in large part on the university’s policies governing the use of the luxury SUVs rented by the athletic association and driven by football recruiting staff during recruiting visits. The football program regularly rented a fleet of the luxury vehicles to shuttle recruits and their families around Athens during recruiting weekends.
Bowles’ attorneys allege the program was negligent in allowing LeCroy to drive a rental vehicle. They are seeking nearly $200,000 to recoup Bowles’ medical bills and lost wages in addition to other unspecified damages.
LeCroy was driving a black Ford Expedition rented by the athletic association when she crashed on Barnett Shoals Road around 2:45 a.m. on Jan. 15, 2023. A police investigation determined she was driving at more than 100 mph as she raced former Georgia football star and current Philadelphia Eagle Jalen Carter. A toxicology report placed her blood alcohol at .197, more than twice the legal limit.
Carter, who is also a defendant in Bowles’ lawsuit, was charged by the Athens-Clarke County Police with racing and reckless driving in March. He pleaded no contest and was sentenced to a year of probation as well as community service.
Since the crash, the athletic association has sought to distance itself from LeCroy, whose estate is also a defendant in the lawsuit. UGA football leadership said in the weeks following the accident she and Bowles had violated policy by not returning the rented SUV after their recruiting duties ended that day. After an initial investigation into the crash, the athletic association determined no policy changes were required.
“It should have been understood,” Smart said at a March press conference, “that you cannot take a vehicle when you’re not doing your duties, and they were not participating in their duties at that time.”
But texts published in Bowles’ original complaint, filed in July, cut into UGA’s narrative. Text conversations dated prior to the Jan. 15 crash show Bowles’ supervisors regularly told her and other recruiting analysts they could keep their rental vehicles overnight.
Dec. 13, 2019 10:42 p.m.
Logen Reed
Hayley said you're good! And you can take your car home if you need to!
Dec. 13, 2019 10:58 p.m.
Victoria Bowles
Wait just making sure you mean I can take the SUV with me?
Dec. 13, 2019 10:58 p.m.
Logen Reed
Yes!
Take it home
Note: Texts in this story have been recreated based on documents obtained by the AJC.
The athletic association appeared to later soften their earlier statements in a September court filing responding to Bowles’ allegations. In that filing, the athletic association said recruiting analysts were occasionally allowed to take rental vehicles home as a convenience. Still, the association’s attorney wrote, LeCroy was not permitted to drive the rental SUV out for “a night of drinking and partying.”
Now, Bowles’ attorneys say the athletic association allowed coaches and staff to drink and drive.
“Text messages show that on occasion supervisors and coaches, in effect, encouraged recruiting staff to drink alcohol with football prospects’ families-well aware that staffers would leave the events after consuming alcohol,” the complaint reads.
Dec. 14, 2019
Marshall Malchow
Hey guys... if you are driving you can have fun at Coach Smarts but if you are driving a recruit make sure you don't get drunk. It will be a bad look if we have people who are supposed to be driving recruits getting lit
The texts suggest that recruiting staff drank at Smart’s home during recruiting events. In one text exchange from January 25, 2020, Godwin sent a picture of an empty Corona beer bottle to a football staff group chat that Bowles’ attorneys said was taken in the basement of Smart’s home.
“One down the hatch,” Godwin texted to a group of football program staffers.
“Godwin, the guy who says not ‘too have too good a time at Kirby’s House.’ slamming beers in the group thread. ‘Cruitin,” another staff member responded.
In another exchange on Dec. 14, 2019, the football program’s director of player personnel, Marshall Malchow, offered guidance to 13 football staffers on how to conduct themselves at an event at Smart’s house.
“Hey guys… if you are driving you can have fun at Coach Smarts but if you are driving a recruit make sure you don’t get drunk. It will be a bad look if we have people who are supposed to be driving recruits getting lit,” he wrote.
Attorneys for former UGA recruiting analyst Tory Bowles allege football staff regularly drove recruits and families after drinking.

Caption
Credit: Olivia Bowdoin
INVESTIGATIONS
By Dylan Jackson
3 hours ago
Attorneys representing a former University of Georgia football recruiting analyst injured in a crash involving alcohol that killed two members of the program say coaches and staffers regularly drove UGA athletic association rental vehicles after drinking.
The attorneys also allege that UGA’s coaches spent cash during unofficial recruiting visits. Such spending by coaches may have violated NCAA rules, according to court papers filed on Thursday.
The allegations are part of an amended complaint in a lawsuit filed against the athletic association and others by former Georgia recruiting staffer Victoria “Tory” Bowles. Her attorneys allege alcohol and coaches’ cash helped lubricate Georgia’s powerhouse recruiting machine.
“My client’s iPhone survived the crash fully intact and contains thousands of pages of recruiting texts describing the inner workings of UGA’s recruiting activities,” Bowles’ attorney Rob Buck said in a statement. “The new texts included in the Amended Complaint establish that the Association was fully aware recruiting staffers were regularly allowed to drive recruits and their families around Athens after drinking alcohol at Association sponsored events.”
The new allegations represent another salvo in the bitter lawsuit between Bowles and her former employer, the UGA athletic association, and come days before the one year anniversary of the Jan. 15 crash that killed Georgia recruiting analyst Chandler LeCroy, who was driving, and offensive lineman Devin Willock, a passenger. Bowles, a passenger in the vehicle, was severely injured. The UGA athletic association on Thursday pushed back about the new assertions by Bowles’ legal team.
Caption

Credit: Compilation
“We are reviewing the amended complaint, but we dispute its claims and will vigorously defend the Athletic Association’s interests in court,” said Steven Drummond, an executive associate athletic director with the UGA athletic association.
Other staffers mentioned by name in the lawsuit could not immediately be reached for comment.
The information included in the updated filing sheds additional light on other aspects of UGA’s football operations, such as the role of UGA athletic association staffer Bryant Gantt, who reported directly to Head Coach Kirby Smart on the program’s org chart and was widely known for having influence with law enforcement.
The filing includes 11 text messages to bolster the various claims. In one such exchange in June 2021, former UGA football staffer Matt Godwin told other staff he was directed by “Cochran,” presumably Georgia special teams coordinator Scott Cochran, to entertain an offensive lineman from another school.
“Cochran told me I gotta get Mitch Zoloty f*****d up tonight so gonna head downtown for a celebratory beer if anyone would like to join,” according to the text quoted in the complaint.
Caption

Credit: HYOSUB SHIN / AJC
Bowles’ attorneys add she is unaware of any enforced prohibition on driving athletic association rental vehicles after drinking alcohol. The filing does not provide any evidence that coaches and staffers were intoxicated when they drove recruits and their families.
The allegations address the heart of Bowles’ lawsuit, filed in Gwinnett County state court, which hinges in large part on the university’s policies governing the use of the luxury SUVs rented by the athletic association and driven by football recruiting staff during recruiting visits. The football program regularly rented a fleet of the luxury vehicles to shuttle recruits and their families around Athens during recruiting weekends.
Bowles’ attorneys allege the program was negligent in allowing LeCroy to drive a rental vehicle. They are seeking nearly $200,000 to recoup Bowles’ medical bills and lost wages in addition to other unspecified damages.
LeCroy was driving a black Ford Expedition rented by the athletic association when she crashed on Barnett Shoals Road around 2:45 a.m. on Jan. 15, 2023. A police investigation determined she was driving at more than 100 mph as she raced former Georgia football star and current Philadelphia Eagle Jalen Carter. A toxicology report placed her blood alcohol at .197, more than twice the legal limit.
Carter, who is also a defendant in Bowles’ lawsuit, was charged by the Athens-Clarke County Police with racing and reckless driving in March. He pleaded no contest and was sentenced to a year of probation as well as community service.
Since the crash, the athletic association has sought to distance itself from LeCroy, whose estate is also a defendant in the lawsuit. UGA football leadership said in the weeks following the accident she and Bowles had violated policy by not returning the rented SUV after their recruiting duties ended that day. After an initial investigation into the crash, the athletic association determined no policy changes were required.
“It should have been understood,” Smart said at a March press conference, “that you cannot take a vehicle when you’re not doing your duties, and they were not participating in their duties at that time.”
But texts published in Bowles’ original complaint, filed in July, cut into UGA’s narrative. Text conversations dated prior to the Jan. 15 crash show Bowles’ supervisors regularly told her and other recruiting analysts they could keep their rental vehicles overnight.
Dec. 13, 2019 10:42 p.m.
Logen Reed
Hayley said you're good! And you can take your car home if you need to!
Dec. 13, 2019 10:58 p.m.
Victoria Bowles
Wait just making sure you mean I can take the SUV with me?
Dec. 13, 2019 10:58 p.m.
Logen Reed
Yes!
Take it home
Note: Texts in this story have been recreated based on documents obtained by the AJC.
The athletic association appeared to later soften their earlier statements in a September court filing responding to Bowles’ allegations. In that filing, the athletic association said recruiting analysts were occasionally allowed to take rental vehicles home as a convenience. Still, the association’s attorney wrote, LeCroy was not permitted to drive the rental SUV out for “a night of drinking and partying.”
Now, Bowles’ attorneys say the athletic association allowed coaches and staff to drink and drive.
“Text messages show that on occasion supervisors and coaches, in effect, encouraged recruiting staff to drink alcohol with football prospects’ families-well aware that staffers would leave the events after consuming alcohol,” the complaint reads.
Dec. 14, 2019
Marshall Malchow
Hey guys... if you are driving you can have fun at Coach Smarts but if you are driving a recruit make sure you don't get drunk. It will be a bad look if we have people who are supposed to be driving recruits getting lit
The texts suggest that recruiting staff drank at Smart’s home during recruiting events. In one text exchange from January 25, 2020, Godwin sent a picture of an empty Corona beer bottle to a football staff group chat that Bowles’ attorneys said was taken in the basement of Smart’s home.
“One down the hatch,” Godwin texted to a group of football program staffers.
“Godwin, the guy who says not ‘too have too good a time at Kirby’s House.’ slamming beers in the group thread. ‘Cruitin,” another staff member responded.
In another exchange on Dec. 14, 2019, the football program’s director of player personnel, Marshall Malchow, offered guidance to 13 football staffers on how to conduct themselves at an event at Smart’s house.
“Hey guys… if you are driving you can have fun at Coach Smarts but if you are driving a recruit make sure you don’t get drunk. It will be a bad look if we have people who are supposed to be driving recruits getting lit,” he wrote.