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Read more →High School on SI's playoff-season fan vote covering the CIF Southern Section — all nine divisions, eight counties, roughly 600 programs — with a Saturday 11:59 p.m. PT close. The statewide California poll runs the regular season; this one runs when the games matter most.
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High School on SI does not run a single California baseball poll. It runs two — and knowing which one your player is eligible for is the first question, because the answer determines your timeline, your field, and your Saturday deadline.
The statewide California baseball poll runs during the regular season, roughly March through early May. It draws from the whole state: NorCal sections and SoCal sections together, ten nominees from hundreds of programs. The April 14, 2026 ballot confirmed that geography — Dane Cunningham from Huntington Beach on the same list as Jett Lewis from Garces Memorial (Bakersfield) and Landon Brunk from Redwood (Larkspur, Marin County).
This poll is different. The Southern California Baseball Player of the Week activates once the CIF Southern Section playoffs begin. Its nominees come only from CIF-SS games, all nine of its divisions, across eight counties. The two ballots do not overlap in time — regular season ends, playoff poll begins. A player from Norco or Harvard-Westlake might appear on both across a season; they are separate editorial decisions in separate windows.
| SoCal Baseball POTW (this poll) | California Baseball POTW (statewide) | |
|---|---|---|
| When it runs | CIF-SS playoffs (May–June) | Regular season (March–May) |
| Eligible programs | CIF Southern Section only (9 divisions) | All CIF sections statewide |
| Nominees per poll | 10 | 10 |
| Vote close | Saturday 11:59 p.m. PT | Saturday 11:59 p.m. PT |
| Published totals | Winner only, no percentage | No raw totals confirmed |
The practical consequence: if your player's team is still alive in the CIF-SS playoffs, this is the ballot they can land on. The regular-season poll is done by the time the Southern California ballot publishes its first playoff-week article.
Two consecutive weeks of nominees reveal something specific about how SI's editors build this field — and about which programs keep surfacing in playoff baseball.
The May 18-24 list is where the contrast is sharpest. Harvard-Westlake, Loyola, and St. Francis appeared in the same week: three of the most decorated private baseball programs in Southern California, all in the CIF-SS playoffs simultaneously, all producing performances that made the ballot. On the same list: Temecula Prep, Trinity Classical Academy, and North Torrance. Those are not programs that make national baseball headlines. A school from Temecula and a school from a Los Angeles canyon suburb with one of the deepest alumni networks in California high school sports, ten nominees, one week.
The May 11-15 field is more Inland Empire. Orange Lutheran and Bishop Montgomery — rival private schools in Torrance and Orange — both nominated the same week, alongside Claremont, Arcadia, and programs from Fontana and Ontario. That geography matters because San Bernardino and Riverside counties run thick with baseball talent in the playoffs, and those communities are not small or disorganized when a school's name appears on a ballot.
The pattern across both weeks: CIF-SS baseball in May draws nominees from every pocket of Southern California. A voter in Duarte and a voter in Laguna Beach are on the same ballot. They almost certainly don't follow the same booster channels, read the same local feeds, or learn about the poll through the same path. That geographic spread is the central fact of running a vote campaign here.
The one number that matters most: Saturday, 11:59 p.m. PT. Both confirmed poll articles stated it verbatim. Not Sunday. Not Monday.
Most SI California polls — football, basketball — close Sunday night. This one closes a day earlier, which compresses the window in a way that catches people who haven't noticed. A playoff game played Tuesday or Wednesday, an article published Wednesday night, a poll that closes Saturday. You have three days. Possibly fewer if the article goes up Thursday.
Saturday also happens to be when the most engaged fans are unavailable. CIF-SS playoff games run Saturdays. The families, coaches, and boosters who care most about the nominee are at a ballpark — not refreshing si.com. By the time they get home, the window is closing. Programs that share the link in the car on the way to the Saturday game, or that get it circulating Thursday and Friday when people are still at their desks, consistently have an advantage over programs that treat Saturday morning as the start of the push.
That's the actual strategic insight here. It's not about volume across a week — it's about front-loading three or four days before the rest of CIF-SS even notices the ballot is live. The weekly fan-vote how-to guide covers the general cadence; for a structured approach to moving votes quickly in a compressed window, vote-support services built for open polls operate on exactly this timeline. More context on how California's fan-vote ecosystem works is at /usa/california/, with the full national directory at /usa/.
The poll lives inside a dated article on si.com/high-school/california, not on a permanent standalone page. Search the site for "Southern California high school baseball player of the week" plus the current month — make sure the article's date matches games from the current CIF-SS playoff round, because older playoff-week ballots stay accessible online and the embedded widget can still accept votes on a closed poll.
Each ballot closes Saturday at 11:59 p.m. PT. That window is shorter than you might expect mid-week — if a game was played Tuesday and the article goes up Wednesday, you have roughly three days. The close time is stated in the article's intro paragraph; confirm it before sharing the link, because the date varies by week.
The ten nominees are listed with their school and the performance that earned the nomination. No login, no account — tap the name and your vote registers immediately. The poll accepts votes from the same device on return visits.
Because closing falls Saturday night rather than Sunday or Monday, the effective campaign window runs Wednesday through Saturday afternoon — not a full week. Getting the link out Thursday is late; Tuesday is better. Programs that treat the article's publish date as the start of the clock, not the end of it, consistently move more votes in a compressed window.
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Last reviewed June 2026. Contest dates, rules and vote caps change each season — always confirm the current rules on the official contest page before you vote.
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