Hughes Springs, Texas is mourning the loss of Bryson Belk, a 19 year old who spent much of his young life around baseball and youth sports before dying in a car crash on June 11, 2026.
Belk was a familiar name in the Hughes Springs Youth Sports Association, where he grew up playing baseball, later became an umpire and most recently coached the 12U team.
The loss has hit especially hard in a small town where a lot of people knew him from the ballfield long before they knew him as a coach.
The Hughes Springs Youth Sports Association said its heart was broken, and First Baptist Church in Hughes Springs held a special prayer service for his family the same evening his death became known.
Funeral arrangements are pending with Reeder Davis Funeral Home in Hughes Springs.
Belk’s life was rooted in the same field where he later gave back to younger kids. He played there as a child, then came back as an umpire and coach, helping guide the next wave of players.
That circle of playing, serving and coaching is part of why so many people in Hughes Springs are grieving him now.
One tribute described him as someone who gave more to the community than many people twice his age.
A young coach remembered for faith and community
People who knew Belk say he was not just about baseball. He was also someone who helped others find community and faith, and he carried himself in a way that left a mark on friends and families around him.

A tribute from Rebekah Butler said her son Jacob had been befriended by Bryson in high school, and that Bryson saw him for who he was and helped him find a place to belong.
She wrote, “He gave my son a place to belong and a group to matter to.” That message echoed what many others have said about him: he made people feel welcome.
Another tribute from Tra Young said, “Save me a seat nephew,” a short but emotional message that showed just how loved Belk was by people close to him.
Others in the community shared prayers and heartbreak, saying they could not believe the news and asking God to comfort the family.
The church and baseball community response also shows how central Belk had become to the town despite being only 19.

In communities like Hughes Springs, youth sports often become a second family, and Belk appears to have been one of the young people who carried that tradition forward.
He grew up in the program, came back to serve in it, and built relationships that stretched beyond wins and losses.
A town preparing to honor his name
Hughes Springs ISD is already planning a memorial in his honor. Class of 2024 alumni announced a 5K memorial run for Belk at 7 p.m. on Monday, June 15, with runners meeting at the tennis courts around 6:45 p.m.
The event was described as self paced, with water provided, and the post closed with the reminder, “Once a Mustang, always a Mustang!”
That memorial run may end up becoming one of the ways the town keeps his memory alive. For a community that watched him grow up on the baseball field, coached him, umpired with him and watched him give back to younger kids, the run is more than a tribute. It is a chance to show that Bryson Belk mattered.
Belk’s death has left Hughes Springs in shock, but the response has also made clear how much he meant to the people around him. He was a player, coach, umpire, church member and friend. At 19, he had already become part of the fabric of the town, and that is what people are holding onto now.
