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VYPE Houston Football Player of the Week Fan Poll (Week 2)
After a wild start to the year Football Season is finally upon us! That means its time to start our weekly polls to let the fans decide their player of the week!
The VYPE Houston Football Player of the Week Fan Poll (Week 2) is now live! Fans will have the chance to vote until Sunday, October 11th, at 7 p.m.
Please note that the use of voting software or bots will result in a deletion of votes and a potential DQ from the contest. PLEASE try to keep this fair and fun for all involved!
All athlete polls and their content are only associated and created by VYPE Media and its staff. The content is not created or voted on by any corporate sponsor or marketing partner. Please contact VYPE Media directly if you have any questions, comments, or concerns around our Fan Polls.
HISD's Joe Tusa was the district's longest tenured AD. With HISD Ad Marmion Dambrino
Houston ISD's Joe Tusa, the trailblazer, passes after a decorated career
How many times have you passed Delmar-Tusa Sports Complex?
The legendary HISD field is in the heart of the city. Sometimes, we forget the names on the stadium.
Joe Tusa passed away this week at the age of 94-years-old. Tusa was the HISD athletic director for more than two decades during some of the most important moments in the history of Texas high school sports.
In the late 1960s and 1970s, Tusa saw Houston high schools through integration and Title IX.
"He wrote me a handwritten letter when I got this job to just congratulate me," HISD AD Andre Walker said. "I still have it in my desk today.
"He was our rock star. He would come to games and was so humble. He made everyone feel like a million bucks. He was just special that way."
Tusa played football at Reagan HS and Rice University. He coached football at Reagan as an assistant and head coach from 1953-1959, before becoming an assistant principal at Waltrip HS in 1960.
He took over the HISD AD position in 1965.
Tusa played a big role in organizing the coaches and athletic director associations in the Houston and the State of Texas. The awards are countless from being named the National AD of the Year to being inducted into countless Hall of Fames in the state. He was also selected for the National Football Foundation Hall of Fame.
Under his direction, he saw Yates win a state football title in 1985 and Wheatley basketball win three-straight state titles. Sharpstown won a baseball state title in 1982 and Yates girls hoops won state in 1983.
Tusa was at the epicenter of HISD's heyday and laid the foundation for high school sports in Houston and the state of Texas.































