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GCCISD Spring Magazine: The 411-Vantasia Harmon presented by Academy Sports + Outdoors
Baytown Lee's Vantasia Harmon has found a home in Baytown after moving over from Lafayette, Louisiana in the eighth grade. She brought her track shoes with her across the Sabine River and is now leaving her legacy on the Gander track and field program.
Harmon recently set a school record in the 200-meters with a personal best of 26.82 in a meet in Anahuac. She looks to build on her resume as the season continues.
VYPE caught up with the speedster in the Spring to get inside the mind of one of the fastest kids in the city.
VYPE: Who has been your inspiration for track and field?
HARMON: "It has to be my sister. I've always looked up to her. She ran in high school and I just wanted to be like her. I started running in middle school and I was pretty good. I just kept going with it and here I am. I'm trying to do this in college."
VYPE: Outside of track and field, what else peaks your interests?
HARMON: "I love hanging out with friends. I'm also into doing hair. I'm pretty good at it. I do it for my friends and sometimes I charge. I can braid and everything. I could make it a business at some point."
VYPE: What's your favorite meal?
HARMON: "Remember, I'm from Louisiana. I'm all about red beans and crawfish. Really, any kind of seafood."
VYPE: What's the goal for this season?
HARMON: "Winning. That's it. I'm trying to get all of my times down and we want to win district as a team. I'm trying to lead this team to do that. It all starts in practice. We have to work hard in everything we do and that includes practice."
VYPE: In your downtime, who do you listen to and what do you watch on Netflix?
HARMON: "I love to listen to J. Cole to relax. As far as what I watch? Ohhh, it's The Walking Dead and Vampire Diaries."
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GCCISD Spring Magazine: Beast Mentality
WHETHER IT BE BEATING OUT A CORNER ON A WHEEL ROUTE OR ANOTHER RUNNER IN THE 200-METER DASH, BAYTOWN LEE'S TRUDELL BERRY HAS THE SAME MENTALITY.
"You've got to have the mentality that you can't be beat," Berry said. "You've got to have a beast mentality. You have to believe in yourself so you can perform well."
On the football field, Berry is a 6-foot-1, 185-pound wide receiver and corner for the Ganders' football team that made the playoffs in the fall for the first time since 2009.
He was named first-team, all-district at outside receiver, and second-team all-district as a cornerback.
"One of his biggest assets is he is the most dependable teammate that you could have," Baytown Lee football coach Tim Finn said. "If we have a practice or workout, no matter what we're doing he's the guy that's going to be there 100-percent of the time.
"And you're going to get his best effort, no matter what sport or what day."
In the football season, Berry finished with just over 400 yards receiving and a pair of interceptions for the Ganders and now turns his attention to track season.
Looking back at last season, before everything halted due to COVID-19, Berry ran a personal-best of 22.03 in the 200-meter dash on March 5, 2020, and their 4x100-meter relay team was also picking up steam.
"I felt like we had a pretty good relay team last year, it was the fastest relay I've ever been on," Berry said. "But COVID happened.
"I have to make up for everything I missed last year. Everything I could have done, all the PRs I could have made. I have to do that this year."
The junior, who competes in the 4x100, 4x200, 4x400, 100, and 200-meter races has had a good start to the year.
The 4x400-meter relay team placed third at the Anahuac relays, where he also took second in the 200-meters – posting a season-best 22.10 time – and third in the 100-meter dash.
His favorite event though – the 200-meter dash.
"It's a long sprint," Berry said. "Coming out of the curve and down the straightaway you have to be mentally strong to keep on running. Keep your form all the way through and finish."
With the hopes of camps and 7-on-7 football happening this spring and summer, Berry is hoping to pick up some steam on the recruiting circuit.
And the dual-sport athlete knows the benefits from running track. His work now will pay off on the gridiron come the fall.
"It's everything, without track there's no success on the football field," Berry said.