Tournament baseball is great for the coaches, who get to mix and match a Rubik’s Cube of lineups over each 4-6 game tournament weekend. It’s great for the players who get lots of “seat time” to hone their timing at the plate, field different positions and maybe log a few innings on the mound. It’s great for fans who get to sate their appetites through a steady parade of teams on fields across Texas.
What tournament baseball is not good for is trying to sus out which teams are legitimate contenders and which are simply early season pretenders. One team can run up an impressive record against overmatched opponents in a weaker tournament while a powerful team can drop three 1-run games again state powers in a different event. Throw in – pardon the pun – the fact that pitching is such an integral part of high school baseball and the records can become skewed in a hurry. Who knows how many arms are left in Game 5 on a Saturday afternoon?
All of that is simply our way of saying these are the teams that seem to have come out of tournament play with decent records, plenty of potential after quality losses, or both. Not sure if it would be any more or less valid to draw names out of a hat at this early stage.
But in the name of having to start somewhere, it sure seems like Buda Johnson has a leg up on the field with plenty of quality teams lined up behind the Jags. Pay special attention as we move into district play to any one of those teams in the Top 10. We suspect this will look different come May, but for now, here’s our first crack at the 2026 Austin area Baseball Power Rankings.
VYPE's Austin Baseball Rankings
(Last week’s rankings in parentheses)
1. (NR) Buda Johnson Jaguars (6A) 13-3-2
2. (NR) Rouse Raiders (5A) 12-2
3. (NR) Dripping Springs Tigers (6A) 12-4-1
4. (NR) Liberty Hill Panthers (5A) 10-3-1
5. (NR) Georgetown Eagles (5A) 14-2
6. (NR) Weiss Wolves (5A) 13-2-1
7. (NR) Bowie Bulldogs (6A) 10-3-1
8. (NR) Round Rock Dragons (6A) 9-6
9. (NR) Westwood Warriors (6A) 11-5-1
10. (NR) Lake Travis Cavaliers (6A) 7-8-1
11. (NR) Hendrickson Hawks (5A) 9-4-2
12. (NR) Anderson Trojans (5A) 9-6
13. (NR) Cedar Ridge Raiders (6A) 8-5-2
14. (NR) San Marcos Rattlers (6A) 10-7-1
15. (NR) Leander (5A) 10-4
On the radar: Vista Ridge Rangers (6A) 8-6; Westlake Chaparrals (6A) 7-10; Navarro (5A) 10-2; Hays Hawks (5A) 7-6-1
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Westlake and Lake Travis have been sitting atop the District 26-6A standings for the better part of a decade. Bowie usually joins them in the playoff hunt, joined more recently by Dripping Springs when the Tigers moved up to 6A. Although the pathway to the playoffs is slightly more open in other sports than it is in football, that still doesn’t leave a lot of room for anyone else to reach the playoffs.
Not content to wait until the Cavs and the Chaps move into a different district next season the Austin High Maroons might be eyeballing the district race with a slightly more hopeful attitude this season. Lake Travis was supposed to be the dominant team in this year’s race, but the Cavs are only off to a 7-8-1 start. Westlake enters district play at 7-10 overall. (Not that anyone expects either of those squads to struggle for long.) Meanwhile, Bowie is 12-3-1 and Dripping Springs is 12-4-1. So, the window is still narrow.
All of which is a roundabout way of saying this week’s district opening series between Austin High and Del Valle is more important than it looks. While Coach Brad Bohannon’s Del Valle Cardinals have some talent back, including six of their eight position players, and have already nearly matched last year’s win total, they still enter district play at just 4-9-1 overall.
Coach Alejandro Arellanes’ Austin High Maroons, on the other hand, have posted a 7-6-1 mark in tournament play, already surpassing last year’s 6-18 mark. A closer look reveals they’re a combined 4-2 on the first day of each of their three tournaments; days that, theoretically at least, they’re throwing their top two pitchers. Two or three solid pitchers go a long way in district play. Add in some experienced stalwarts like senior catcher Osby Contreras, outfielder Patrick Byrd and senior pitcher/outfielder combos Henry Chuter and Jayson Martinez and the Maroons have enough talent to make things interesting.
Austin High has improved to where they’re the “favorite” to at least finish fifth. To make the postseason, they’ll need to sweep Del Valle and Akins and poach a couple of games from the other four. That’s not that farfetched. One of their two district wins last season came against a Dripping Springs squad that reached the state semifinals. Anything can happen in baseball.
First things first, starting with this week’s series between Austin High and Del Valle and we’ll have the broadcasts for you on VYPE.
What: Austin High vs. Del Valle
When: Tuesday 3/10, 6:45 pregame; Friday, 3/13, 4:45 pregame
Where: Tues. @ Del Valle; Fri. @ Burger Field
Who: David Roy
Watch: Broadcast Lineup on https://www.vype.com/
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By Matt Powell
It should be no surprise that Cypress Springs has won back-to-back district titles or is in the State Semifinals this season.
Why?
Coach Larry Boykin carries a coaching lineage that runs through legends — from David Green of Beaumont United to David Martinez of Atascocita to Sam Benitez now of Cypress Creek.
Boykin has built a power program at Cypress Springs over the past eight seasons and now sits one step away from the State Finals.
Standing in their way is Little Elm, whom they face Tuesday night.
VYPE’s Matt Malatesta talks ball with Coach Boykin on the eve of the program’s biggest game in school history.
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