VYPE caught up with Nick Codutti, Fulshear Head Football Coach at the VYPE Lamar Consolidated ISD Fall 2023 Media Day about the season and more!
Check out the interview below!
VYPE caught up with Nick Codutti, Fulshear Head Football Coach at the VYPE Lamar Consolidated ISD Fall 2023 Media Day about the season and more!
Check out the interview below!
Kingwood has firmly asserted itself as one of the hottest teams in Texas as the season moves beyond its midway point. Under head coach Adam Bell, the Lady Mustangs have surged to an unbeaten 14-0-1 start, stacking quality results against heavyweights like Stratford and district rival Atascocita in their first meeting of the winter. The consistency of that run has placed Kingwood squarely among the state’s most reliable contenders.
A recent 1-1 draw with Summer Creek (10-3-4) offered a reminder of the volatility that explains District 23-6A, where margins are thin and results rarely come easy. Still, Kingwood’s defensive profile continues to separate it from the field. Through the early portion of 2026, KHS has allowed just four goals, a telling indicator as they position themselves in the district title race.
That defensive identity begins along the back line, anchored by 2025 Team MVP Kate Kristiansen and Addie Abdmoulaie. Both first-team all-district selections a year ago, the senior duo provides stability and composure. They’re complemented by Camryn Hicks, a second-team honoree, along with the SFA-bound Elizabeth Quinn and Helen Shamaly, forming a unit defined by cohesion.
Offensively, Texas Woman’s University signee Concepcion Maya supplies the primary scoring threat. A first-team all-district selection, Maya’s versatility allows her to influence the game as a forward or from an attacking midfield role. Behind her, senior holding midfielder Harper Mills plays an integral role in coordinating the attack, dictating tempo, and linking lines.
The second half of district play rarely offers comfort, only clarity. Kingwood has responded with control, pairing discipline at the back with purpose going forward. After a three-round postseason run a year ago, the Lady Mustangs aren’t navigating new territory—they’re reinforcing what has already been established.

Memorial’s Grant Sperandio has committed to Texas
The legend of Memorial’s Grant Sperandio started early — and he’s lived up to the hype.
“We had heard things about an incoming freshman who was really good, but do you know how many times I’ve heard that?” Memorial coach Jeremy York said. “Well, the first day of tryouts he throws a ball across the infield at 92 miles per hour. We had him warm up in the bullpen, but we couldn’t put him against other freshmen — so he threw to varsity hitters. Yep, he was the real deal… and he’s only gotten better.”
Sperandio committed to the University of Texas as a freshman — a ninth grader headed to one of the premier programs in college baseball.
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Fast forward to the summer before his junior year. Enter newly hired football coach Brooks Haack.
“He’d never really had quarterback training, and he couldn't do spring ball because he was in the middle of baseball season,” Haack said. “He missed most of fall ball because he was in San Diego training at an MLB workout. Then in one of his first plays, he submarine-throws a ball into a tiny window that goes for about an 80-yard touchdown.
“He was instrumental in our success this season, and he’s just getting started. After the season, he told me he wanted to run the ball more as a dual-threat quarterback. I laughed — I don’t want a $2 million NIL deal on my head,” he joked.
Being a dual-sport athlete in today’s era of specialization isn’t easy — but Sperandio embraces it.
“Two-sport athletes usually end up having great careers,” he said. “Playing football gets my mind off baseball. I’ve found that it makes me stronger and tougher heading into baseball season.
“Honestly, I just like to compete. My parents always say someone is always working while you’re resting. That’s embedded in my mind. I’m not going to be outworked, and no one wants to win more than me.”
Memorial fell to eventual state champion Kingwood in the regional semifinals — and Sperandio hasn’t forgotten it.
“Losing is part of the game, and adversity is good,” he said. “It makes me hungrier to win. We have the best pitching staff in the nation, we’ve prepared all offseason, and our chemistry is strong. We’re ready to make a real run this season.”
His coaches sum it up best.
“Grant Sperandio is a gamer, period,” Haack said.
“Playing football has made him even more of a bulldog than last season — and that’s scary,” York added.
The legacy? It’s still being written.
Houston Christian High basketball is rolling again under coach Ron Crandall.
The Mustangs have positioned themselves as the odds-on favorites to capture the SPC Championship, powered by standout point guard Demetri Lewis and forwards Landon Veal and Miller Martin.
Riding a 20-game winning streak, Houston Christian continues to prove it’s one of the area’s elite programs. The Mustangs are this week’s Whataburger Team of the Week.
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