Judson High School


Judson High School is a public, co-educational secondary school in Converse, Texas, United States, 15 miles northeast of downtown San Antonio. It was established in 1959 as part of the Judson Independent School District, and is currently classified as a 6A school by the University Interscholastic League. Judson High School is the second oldest International Baccalaureate World School in Texas, since 1985. The school and the District were named after Moses Campbell Judson, who served on the Bexar County School Board from 1918 to 1939. His nephew Jack Judson was on the board when the decision was made to name the new rural high school Judson.
For a portion of its history up through 2010, Judson High School used a dual campus system wherein juniors and seniors attended the "Red Campus" and freshmen and sophomores attended the "Gray Campus." Previous to this dual campus system, Judson also had an atypical structure because it only housed grades 10-12 with the middle schools supporting grades 7-9. These structural departures from a typical high school system were due to efforts to accommodate the area's rapid population growth.
A single building now houses all departments with the exception of the agriculture facilities. All original buildings that made up the Red Campus were razed in 2011 to make way for new athletic fields and tennis courts, and the Gray Campus was re-purposed into Judson Middle School. The Judson ISD Performing Arts Center, constructed in 1998, houses the band, choir, orchestra, and drama classes. The PAC facility has a recital hall that seats 216 people, and an Auditorium that has 840 seats. The Judson ISD Performing Arts Center is physically connected to Judson High School via a vestibule.
Judson was named a National Blue Ribbon School in 1999-2000.
Before 2005 Judson was the only high school in the district. Karen Wagner High School opened in Fall 2005, and in Fall 2016 the district opened a third high school, Veterans Memorial High School.

Athletics

Judson's athletic programs have experienced state championship success in several sports.
Football
The Judson Rocket football program emerged as a perennial power in the 1977 season. Judson won its first state championship in 1983.
D.W. Rutledge coached the Rockets until 2000 amassing a record of 198-31-5 taking the Rockets to seven state championship games, and winning four state titles. The football stadium is named after Coach Rutledge in his honor.
After the 2000 season the team went to the state playoffs in nine of eleven seasons making three championship game appearances and winning one state championship.
Mark Smith, formerly of Kerrville Tivy High School where he coached Heisman Trophy winner Johnny Manziel, assumed head coaching duties at Judson from 2012 through 2013.
Sean McAuliffe, an alumnus of Judson High School and its football program, became the head coach starting with the 2014 season.
Judson offensive coordinator Rodney Williams became head coach in May 2019. In his first season Williams led the Rockets to a regular season record of 9-1, but the team lost to Lake Travis 48-35 in the Region 4 Final, finishing the season at 12-2.
Judson has made it to the playoffs 41 times over 58 total seasons, advanced to the state semifinal level 18 times, reached the state title game 11 times, and won the state championship six times.
Judson holds the all-time Texas state record with 43 consecutive winning seasons from 1977 through 2019. The team last finished with a losing record in 1976 and is a combined 456-103-5 during the streak. The previous record for consecutive winning seasons was 36 set by Plano Senior High School. During the current streak, Judson has won over 80 percent of its games, and the worst record in 43 years is 7-5 with a worst regular season record of 6-4.
YearsRecordWinning Percentage
1977 to 2019456-103-581%
1962 to 2019509-197-1072%

Judson's season records during the streak from 1977-2019 are below.
YearRecordHead CoachSeason Result
197710-1SandersLost in bi-district round to San Antonio Holmes 14-21
197810-2SandersLost in regional round to San Antonio Churchill 14-30
197910-1SandersLost in bi-district round to San Antonio Jay 28-0
19806-4ArnoldMissed playoffs
19817-3ArnoldMissed playoffs
198214-1ArnoldState semifinalist losing to Beaumont Westbrook 12-27
198315-1ArnoldState champion defeating Midland Lee 25-21
198411-2-1RutledgeState quarterfinalist losing to San Antonio Madison 16-19
198512-2RutledgeState quarterfinalist losing to San Antonio Holmes 29-30
198612-1RutledgeState quarterfinalist losing to Austin Reagan 15-18
19879-1-1RutledgeLost in area championship to state semifinalist Fort Bend Willowridge 17-8
198815-1RutledgeState champion defeating Dallas Carter 1-0
198914-1RutledgeState semifinalist losing to Aldine 14-48
199014-2RutledgeState finalist losing to Marshall 19-21
199111-3RutledgeState semifinalist losing to Fort Bend Dulles 26-27
199214-1RutledgeState champion defeating Euless Trinity 52-0
199313-0-2RutledgeState champion defeating Plano 36-13
199410-3-1RutledgeState semifinalist losing to Katy 19-42
199514-1RutledgeState champion defeating Odessa Permian 31-28
199613-2RutledgeState finalist losing to Lewisville 34-58
19977-4RutledgeLost in bi-district round to Austin Crockett 15-26
199814-1RutledgeState finalist losing to Duncanville 21-24
19997-3RutledgeMissed playoffs
20008-3RutledgeLost in bi-district round to Austin Westlake 6-35
20019-3RackleyLost in regional round to San Antonio Taft 13-32
200214-1RackleyState champion defeating Midland 33-32
20036-4RackleyMissed playoffs
200413-1RackleyState semifinalist losing to Spring Westfield 14-28
200510-5RackleyState finalist losing to Euless Trinity 14-28
20066-4RackleyMissed playoffs
200711-5RackleyState finalist losing to Euless Trinity 10-13
20088-3RackleyLost in bi-district round to San Antonio Stevens 12-14
20099-3RackleyLost in area round to Austin Westlake 17-43
20107-5RackleyLost in area round to San Antonio Stevens 27-33
20118-3RackleyLost in bi-district round to San Antonio Madison 24-25
20128-4SmithLost in area round to San Antonio O'Connor 28-34
201311-3SmithState quarterfinalist losing to San Antonio Madison 29-33
201410-5McAuliffeState semifinalist losing to Cypress Ranch 31-38
201513-2McAuliffeState semifinalist losing to Galena Park North Shore 17-23
20169-3McAuliffeLost in second round to state quarterfinalist Austin Westlake 21-24
201710-2McAuliffeLost in second round to state finalist Austin Lake Travis, 39-47
201812-1McAuliffeState quarterfinalist losing to state semifinalist Lake Travis 38-21
201912-2WilliamsState quarterfinalist losing to state semifinalist Lake Travis 48-35

Track and Field
Judson track and field programs have experienced significant recent success. The boys team won the 2013 Texas 5A state track meet, and the girls team won consecutive Texas 5A/6A state championships in 2014 and 2015.
Basketball
The Judson Rocket boys basketball program has been a perennial contender under coach Michael Wacker. Judson has been to the UIL state tournament three times: 1992-1993, 2000-2001, and 2013-2014. In all three instances, Judson lost to the eventual state champion. The Rockets finished the 2014 season with a record of 37-2, the best record in Judson boys basketball history.
YearTitleCoachSeason Result
1993State FinalistWackerLost to Fort Worth Dunbar 74-64
2001State SemifinalistWackerLost to Sugar Land Willowridge 67-64
2014State FinalistWackerLost to Galena Park North Shore 57-45

Under coach Triva Corrales, the Judson Rocket girls basketball program has been to the UIL state tournament three times losing to the eventual state champion in 2017, 2018, and 2020. Judson beat Desoto in 2019 to claim its first state title in girls basketball.
YearTitleCoachSeason Result
2017State SemifinalistCorralesLost to Duncanville 53-41
2018State FinalistCorralesLost to Plano 62-58
2019State ChampionCorralesBeat Desoto 49-46
2020State SemifinalistCorralesLost to Duncanville 45-36

Wrestling
The wrestling program has recent individual state titles in the 140 lbs. weight class through Aaron Walker.

Notable alumni