BOULDER - Christian Ward has spent his football life learning how to fit in, then learning how to separate himself.
That path has taken the Colorado freshman wide receiver from Carrollton, Ga., to Walton High School in Marietta, then to IMG Academy in Bradenton, Fla., and now to Boulder, where the 6-foot-3, 205-pound early enrollee arrived in January ready for the next jump. Each stop asked something different of him. Each one, Ward said, forced him to grow.
“Coming from being the guy and going to a power school where everybody's the guy, you have to know how to maneuver your way and be a leader,” Ward said. “That's the same way here. Coming to college, everybody's the guy, so you have to work harder and try to stand out some type of way.”
Colorado brought in Ward as a consensus three-star prospect. Rivals had him at No. 175 among wide receivers in the class, ESPN ranked him No. 70 nationally at the position and 247Sports placed him No. 135.
His senior year at IMG gave him a taste of the level he is trying to reach. In nine games, Ward caught 11 passes for 221 yards and two touchdowns, averaging 24.6 yards per reception. He also picked up Offensive Player of the Year honors and the Leadership Award.
“I worked hard in the offseason,” Ward said. “First person in the building every day, getting to know the coaches, getting to know the players and just really being that older guy in the room. I knew I had a big step to take going to all these different schools, but it was definitely a great feeling.”
Before IMG, Ward put together a strong junior season at Walton, where he hauled in 46 catches for 768 yards and 10 touchdowns as the team went 7-5 and reached the Class 6A playoffs. In 2023, he played at Carrollton alongside Colorado quarterback Julian Lewis, finishing with 12 receptions for 362 yards and five touchdowns.
That connection already gave Ward some comfort before he got to Boulder.
“It was amazing,” Ward said. “I got a lot of reps with him.
He's a good quarterback. I trained with him a lot outside of Carrollton, so it was really great just knowing him at a younger age.”
Even with that familiarity, the move to Colorado still meant adjusting to a new place, a new level and a receiver room where nobody is handed anything.
Ward believes his game gives him a real base to build on. He says he can diagnose defenses, understand cornerbacks and stretch the field vertically. A lot of that, he said, comes from working with trainer Josh Norman and spending time around defensive backs, including his brother Alex, who is also a freshman receiver at Colorado.
If he had to name his biggest strength, Ward didn’t hesitate.
“Probably just taking someone deep,” Ward said. “Being a deep threat.”
He also knows the next step is tightening the details. At his size, Ward can already create problems for defenders, but he is focused on the part of his game that will sharpen everything else.
“Probably my shiftiness,” Ward said. “Being a tall guy with long legs, I know we need that shiftiness in this part of the game, so I'm trying to get the route running perfected.”
Ward’s background across basketball and track and field also shaped him. He said both sports helped with conditioning, agility and movement.
The move to Colorado also brought family into the picture in a bigger way. Alex enrolled early at CU after reclassifying, giving Christian another familiar face in the building. He said the sibling competition used to be more intense, but that has changed.
“It’s not really about competition,” Ward said. “It’s about both of us getting on the field, playing and winning.”
Family has been a steadying force for Ward. He is the son of Jasen and Semaris Ward and has four brothers: Jace, Alex, Ethan and Nathan.
His uncle, Jamal Hatten, played college football. The message from home has been simple and consistent: keep your mind right, stay away from distractions and remember why you’re doing the work.
That perspective has mattered as he settles into Boulder. The transition from Georgia and Florida to Colorado came with a quick lesson in altitude and weather.
“When I first got here, [the altitude] was bad,” Ward said. “It was snowing. It was cold.”
Still, he has found ways to settle in. Ward likes long walks, hiking, training, listening to music and studying. He said those routines help him clear his head when football starts to pile up.
“Your mindset can get a little overconsumed,” Hiking helps me focus, helps me stay locked in on knowing what I'm here for.”
“It was a tough journey, just getting up there to the top of my mountain. It’s actually a long, long walk, but for sure, getting up there was a great feat to overcome,”
That idea of overcoming has followed him through every stop. Ward has kept moving, kept adjusting and kept trying to become more than the player he was at the last place. Now he wants that same growth to show up in Colorado.
“Be better than where I came from,”
He is looking to earn a role, make plays and bring energy when his chance comes. Ward wants Buffs fans to see a receiver who runs hard, plays fast and shows up with force.
“Hard-working guy,” he said. “Someone who's going to go full speed every play, make plays and make the crowd go crazy.”
Colorado opens the season in prime time Thursday, Sept. 3, in Atlanta against Georgia Tech on ESPN. The Buffs then return to Boulder the following week to open their home schedule against Weber State on Sept. 12, which will give Ward his first chance to run out at Folsom Field as a Colorado player.
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