What are the best Texas high school football programs?

Photo by Michael Hall

Share or Save for Later

Share on Twitter Share on Facebook Save to Favorites

It's a constant debate: what is the best program in Texas high school football? Let's throw some fuel on that fire once again.

With data help from Jerry Forrest at PigskinPrep.com, Dave Campbell's Texas Football is proud to unveil the 2025 edition of its Texas High School Football 6-Year Program Rankings, a look at the relative strength of each UIL Texas high school football program. The goal of the project is to rank the relative strength of every program in Texas over the course of the last six seasons.

View the complete rankings — ALL 1,216 teams — RIGHT HERE!

Why six seasons? A six-year sample provides a steady measure of a program as opposed to an individual squad — six years represents one-and-a-half graduation cycles, mitigating the impact of a single transcendent class of athletes. In short: good programs have great teams one or two years, but great programs have great teams spread across a larger swath of time, like six years.

The rankings are based on a formula that takes into account the following five criteria:

  • Games Won — The raw number of games a team won relative to the maximum number possible (96 for 11-man teams, 90 for 6-man teams); so, of the maximum number of games a team could have won, how many did it win?
  • Winning Percentage — Of the games a team played, how many did it win?
  • 10-Win Seasons — Of the six seasons, how many did a team win 10 games?
  • State Championships — How many state titles did a team win?
  • State Championship Game Appearances — How many state championship games did a team play?

The criteria are set against a 100-point scale, wherein a perfect six-year run — 96-0 (or 90-0 for a six-man team) with six state championships — would result in a score of 100, and a perfectly miserable six-year run — 0-96 (or 0-90 for a six-man team) — would result in a score of zero.

This year's set of rankings reflect the 2019 through 2024 seasons; last year's rankings reflected the 2018 through 2023 seasons. Please note: a team must have played in six varsity seasons to be eligible for these rankings. As a result, teams like Richmond Randle, San Antonio Davenport and Canyon West Plains — all of which would've ranked in the top 250 if they were eligible — will not appear in these rankings.

This article is available to our Digital Subscribers.
Click "Subscribe Now" to see a list of subscription offers.
Already a Subscriber? Sign In to access this content.

Sign In