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On Wednesday, the McKinney Boyd Broncos and McKinney Lions girls golf teams competed in a golf tournament.
Check out the highlights from the game below!
The Dripping Springs Lady Tigers dispatched two district opponents, including 9th ranked Bowie, to dig in atop this week’s softball Power Rankings. And very little changed behind them.
Weiss stayed at #2 after undefeated Mother Nature “won” the Weiss vs. Hendrickson game, forcing a postponement between those two ranked teams. #3 Georgetown still holds the bronze position after edging crosstown rival East View in a battle between two Top 5 teams with Leander remaining wedged between them after sweeping their week.
It’s more of the same to round out the rest of the Top 10, where the only change is Vista Ridge moving up a spot over Bowie after the Lady Dawgs’ aforementioned loss to Drip.
The real action is at the bottom of the Rankings. Hays stays put at #11 despite their loss to #4 Leander, while Round Rock remains at #12. Gateway Prep continues to be the highest-ranked 4A squad, moving up a spot after two dominant wins. Then it’s Austin LASA debuting at #14 after knocking off the Bastrop Lady Bears earlier in the week.
With Easter in the rearview mirror, here are the Rankings head into the final two-plus weeks of the regular season.
VYPE's Austin Softball Rankings
(Last week’s rankings in parentheses)
1. (1) Dripping Springs Lady Tigers (6A) 22-6-1 (Def. Austin High; def. #9 Bowie)
2. (2) Weiss Lady Wolves (5A) 22-3-2 (Def. Elgin; @ #6 Hendrickson PPD)
3. (3) Georgetown Lady Eagles (5A) 21-8 (Def. #5 East View; def. Elgin)
4. (4) Leander Lady Lions (5A) 24-6-1 (Def. #11 Hays; def. Cedar Park)
5. (5) East View Lady Patriots (5A) 22-8 (Lost @ #3 Georgetown; def. Pflugerville)
6. (6) Hendrickson Lady Hawks (5A) 19-5 (vs. #2 Weiss PPD)
7. (7) Liberty Hill Lady Panthers (5A) 20-7 (Def. Rouse; def. Lockhart)
8. (8) Hutto Lady Hippos (6A) 22-9-2 (Def. McNeil; def. Westwood)
9. (10) Vista Ridge Lady Rangers (6A) 18-8 (Def. Westwood, def. Manor)
10. (9) Bowie Lady Bulldogs (6A) 16-11-1 (Def. Del Valle; lost vs. #1 Dripping Springs)
11. (11) Hays Lady Hawks (5A) 21-7 (Lost @ #5 Leander; def. Rouse)
12. (12) Round Rock Lady Dragons (6A) 15-7 (Def. Stony Point)
13. (14) Gateway Prep Lady Gators (4A) 16-5 (Def. Marble Fall; def. Burnet)
14. (NR) Austin LASA Lady Raptors (5A) 14-8 Def. Ann Richards; def. #13 Bastrop
15. (13) Bastrop Lady Bears (5A) 17-11 (Def. Navarro; lost vs. Austin LASA)
On the Radar: Lake Travis (14-12); Westlake (12-11); Glenn (15-13-1); Stony Point (6A) 13-13
Some of the stars of 2025-26 Houston Christian HS Basketball
On the surface, Houston Christian’s 35–1 season—culminating in its fifth SPC title—looked more dominant than ever. A 66–42 victory over Episcopal in the SPC 4A Final brought head coach Ron Crandall closer to 600 career wins, highlighting the sustained excellence he and his program have built over nearly two decades.
Yet the record and the trophy tell only part of the story. The deeper significance of this championship lies in the culture Crandall and his players cultivated from the very beginning.
“We could tell early on that we had something special,” Crandall said. “A lot of that came from our willingness to connect, starting in the offseason. We read The 7 Commitments of a Great Team together—going through a few pages each day and meeting twice a week to discuss it. That helped us get to know each other on a deeper level than just basketball. It became our focus and built a bond that was unbreakable—and one we were able to sustain.”
Houston Christian adapted The 7 Commitments as a guiding framework, emphasizing commitment to the team’s vision, positivity, continuous improvement, connection, and valuing each other. Those principles evolved into a player-driven mission statement: “Be a Brotherhood that inspires others through our infectious energy and discipline.”
On a broader level, the program’s identity is rooted in its “Be ELITE” mantra, introduced in 2020. More than a call to be superior, ELITE represents Excellence, Love, Identity, Thankfulness, and Enthusiasm.
“A coach told me a long time ago, ‘You are what you emphasize, and you get what you tolerate,’” Crandall said. “We want to be a team that emphasizes more than just going out there to hoop and win games. We want to be the young men God calls us to be, pursuing excellence through the process we follow each day.”
The players delivered on that philosophy. Juniors Landon Veal, Josiah “Jojo” McGowen, and Will Arriaga—each All-SPC selections—often proved too much for opponents to handle. Veal’s standout season earned him a Guy V. Lewis Award nomination and Tournament MVP honors, while senior point guard Demetri Lewis, Aiden Pitcaithly, Xavier Gibbons, and Miller Martin each contributed selflessly to the team’s success.
“Everyone has a special role that they bring to the team, and we value what that is,” Crandall said. “Let’s minimize what they can’t do and maximize what they can do. We poured into each other to bring out the very best in everyone to fulfill that role.”
One might assume that winning a championship is the ultimate goal each season, but that’s part of what sets Houston Christian apart.
“We’re not defined by how many championships we win,” Crandall said. “We should be defined by the impact we have on people—that’s what legacy is about. Titles are just an experience you share with that team, but it’s the journey that led there that you’ll always remember.”
For Crandall and his Mustangs, that journey—built on connection, discipline, and shared values—remains the real blueprint of success.
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