Skip to main content

Southern California High School Softball Player of the Week: How Voting Works & How to Win

The High School on SI / SBLive fan vote for the best CIF Southern Section softball performance of the week. Editors nominate 10 players spanning all nine CIF-SS divisions, anyone votes with no account, and the ballot closes Saturday at 11:59 p.m. PT — a full day before Sunday's statewide softball poll opens its own final hours.

Run by: High School on SI / SBLive Sports Market: Southern California, CA Cadence: weekly Vote cap: No per-period cap posted; standard SI unlimited-vote format
Thematic photo for Southern California High School Softball Player of the Week showing Southern California High School Softball Player of the Week voting workflow

Disclosure: buyvotescontest.com is a vote-promotion service. This is independent, informational coverage of a public contest run by a third party; we are not affiliated with the organizer. Where our own services are relevant they are clearly labeled, and the contest's official rules always take precedence.

The thing most voters get wrong about this ballot

The Southern California softball poll is not the statewide California poll. That matters more than it sounds. High School on SI runs a separate California-wide softball Player of the Week drawing nominees from NorCal, LA City, San Diego, and the CIF Southern Section all at once. This poll covers CIF-SS only — the roughly 600 schools across eight southern counties. The two polls are distinct ballots, different articles, different nominee pools. A player could appear on both in a strong week, or only on one.

Why does that boundary matter? Because the campaign approach is completely different. On the statewide ballot, a voter is competing against schools from Sacramento, the Bay Area, and San Diego simultaneously. On the SoCal ballot, the field of 10 comes entirely from eight counties — Los Angeles, Orange, San Bernardino, Riverside, Ventura, Santa Barbara, San Diego, and Imperial — and that means the community networks driving the vote are, in most cases, within an hour's drive of each other. Tighter geography means faster information spread. Booster groups that span the same county circuit move quicker than ones that cross regional lines.

The other thing worth knowing before anything else: this ballot closes Saturday at 11:59 p.m. PT. Not Sunday, not Monday — Saturday night. The week's CIF-SS games typically finish Thursday and Friday; the ballot goes live and runs through Saturday. That gives supporters roughly 48 to 72 hours of active voting time, and Friday evening is the peak window — the week's results are still fresh, fans are paying attention after games, and Saturday's close hasn't yet created a false sense that there's more time. A push that waits until Saturday afternoon is already late.

March 18, 2026 field: eight counties, nine divisions, one list

The confirmed nominee list from March 18, 2026 is worth reading as a map of where CIF-SS softball talent surfaces on these ballots.

NomineeSchoolRegion / County
Bella HernandezValley ViewInland Empire (Moreno Valley)
Cheri ThompsonKingInland Empire (Riverside)
Chloe HernandezCarlsbadNorth San Diego County
Evalina ChavezHighlandAntelope Valley (Palmdale)
Andrea VarelaColtonInland Empire (San Bernardino Co.)
Hayley BrockFullertonOrange County
Mia DiazEtiwandaInland Empire (Rancho Cucamonga)
Hazel RenteriaDowneySoutheast LA County
Allison HindsSimi ValleyVentura County
Annabel RafteryJSerra CatholicSouth Orange County

Four of the 10 came from the Inland Empire (Valley View, King, Etiwanda, Colton). That's not a coincidence — the IE corridor from Riverside to Rancho Cucamonga is one of the densest concentrations of CIF-SS softball programs, and it generates a proportionate share of weekly standout performances. But the field also stretched from Carlsbad near the San Diego border to the Antelope Valley's Highland, to Ventura County's Simi Valley. That span — roughly 150 miles from tip to tip — sits on a single 10-name ballot.

The all-nine-divisions language the editors use for this poll (the same phrasing they use for the SoCal baseball POTW) means a Division V player from Colton lands on the same list as a Division I program from Etiwanda or JSerra. Division placement does not filter the ballot. A smaller classification school whose community turns out in force can win a week when a Trinity League program is also nominated. The March 18 field is a clean illustration of that structure.

How SoCal's regional networks actually move these votes

Southern California has no single unified booster culture — it has a dozen of them, each with its own speed and topology, and knowing which type your school has is more useful than any generic campaign advice.

Inland Empire public schools like Valley View and Etiwanda draw on sprawling residential communities where youth-sports networks overlap with the high school program. The IE has seen explosive population growth over two decades, which means alumni networks are younger (more people still living in the region) and more digitally connected than comparable-sized programs in more established suburbs. An IE school with a nominee can often activate a real vote push within a single afternoon of group-chat traffic.

Catholic programs like JSerra Catholic operate through a different circuit entirely. Trinity League families tend to be spread across a wide geographic area — players commuting from multiple cities — but the school-community identity is tight and the alumni base skews affluent and active on social media. JSerra's reach is wide; its conversion rate per share can be high. But it takes deliberate cross-geography coordination that a compact local public school doesn't need.

Ventura County programs like Simi Valley and the Antelope Valley's Highland sit at the edges of the CIF-SS footprint. That geographic remove means their community networks are geographically concentrated — fewer alumni have drifted far — which can be an advantage when the push needs to happen fast. A ballot closing Saturday night rewards the school whose supporters are still reachable Friday after games. Tight local networks often are.

For vote-support campaigns specifically tied to this poll's Saturday close, the window to work with is Friday evening through Saturday afternoon. The broader context for fan-vote strategy is at /usa/california/ and the national directory at /usa/.

How to vote in Southern California High School Softball Player of the Week

  1. 1

    Find the current week's poll on si.com

    The ballot is embedded inside a dated article on si.com/high-school/california — not a standalone poll page. After each week's games, look for the newest "Southern California High School Softball Player of the Week" post. Older weeks' ballots remain live online, so confirm the article date before you vote; casting votes into a closed or prior week's poll does nothing for a current nominee.

  2. 2

    Read the stat lines before picking

    Each of the 10 nominees is listed with the performance that earned the nod — batting average, home runs, strikeouts if a pitcher, the opponent and outcome. Those write-ups are the only place the week's field is explained. Spending a minute there tells you who's on the ballot and why, which also tells you whose community is likely already mobilizing.

  3. 3

    Cast your vote, then return

    Tap your player in the embedded widget. The poll does not post a per-period cap, so returning through the week is fine — but the ballot closes hard at Saturday 11:59 p.m. PT, so every hour Friday and Saturday matters more than the earlier part of the week.

  4. 4

    Treat Friday evening as the real turning point

    Because this poll closes Saturday night, the Friday window — after that week's games end and before casual fans move on to the weekend — is when the sharpest vote swings happen. A booster post that hits Friday evening and another Saturday afternoon reaches supporters at peak attention.

Southern California High School Softball Player of the Week — frequently asked questions

14 answers covering legality, delivery, quality, pricing and platform specifics.

Legality & scope

Are automated voting tools prohibited?
Yes. The organizer's stated policy is that automated scripts and macros result in the athlete's disqualification — not just vote removal. That framing is specific to this platform. The poll is built for manual fan engagement, and a result that holds up is one that comes from real supporters reaching the ballot under their own effort.

Process & delivery

When does voting close each week?
Saturday at 11:59 p.m. PT. The March 22 deadline for the March 18 poll is confirmed in the source article. That Saturday close is different from the Texas regional football polls (Monday), and it sets up Friday evening and Saturday as the decisive stretch — the weekend's games are finishing and casual fans are most reachable.
How are the 10 nominees selected each week?
High School on SI editors select the field from that week's CIF-SS games. Nominations can be submitted via email to athleteoftheweek@scorebooklive.com or by tagging @sbliveca on X or Instagram. A submission with the full stat line, the school, the opponent, and the game result — arriving by early in the week — has the best chance of being considered before the editors finalize the ballot.
Is there a vote limit per person?
The organizer's language for this poll format is that "we do not set limits on how many times a fan can vote during the competition." What the poll does prohibit is automated scripts and macros — those can result in the athlete's disqualification. The practical structure is: unlimited manual votes, and the Saturday close is the only hard boundary.
Can I nominate a player who isn't on the ballot?
You cannot add a player mid-cycle; the ballot is fixed once published. To put a player forward for a future week, email athleteoftheweek@scorebooklive.com with the player's name, school, position, stat line, and opponent. The editors review submissions from the current week's games, so a note sent Friday or over the weekend has the best timing for the following cycle's ballot.

Service quality

How does vote-support work for a poll with a Saturday close?
The Saturday close concentrates the campaign into a shorter window than polls that run into Sunday or Monday. A structured vote push that starts when the ballot goes live and peaks Friday night into Saturday afternoon maps cleanly to this deadline. Services like <a href="/buy-sports-fan-poll-votes/">sports fan-poll vote support</a> exist specifically for weekly SI-format polls; the open, unlimited-vote structure is what makes them applicable here.

Platform specifics

What schools are eligible for the Southern California softball poll?
Only CIF Southern Section programs are eligible — roughly 600 schools across eight counties (Los Angeles, Orange, San Bernardino, Riverside, San Diego, Ventura, Santa Barbara, and Imperial). The CIF LA City Section and the CIF San Diego Section run separately and are not included in this ballot. That distinction matters: a strong LA City performer who doesn't appear here isn't being overlooked — she's in a different editorial pool.
How is this poll different from the statewide California softball Player of the Week?
The statewide poll draws nominees from all CIF sections across California — NorCal programs, LA City, San Diego, and CIF-SS all compete on one ballot. This SoCal-specific poll limits its field to CIF Southern Section nominees only, which means a narrower geographic field but one that closely tracks the section's own playoff structure. Both polls run on the SI platform; the statewide poll also closes on a weekend, so a nominee in a strong week could appear on both ballots in the same cycle.
Do all nine CIF-SS divisions appear on the same ballot?
Yes. The March 18 poll's 10 nominees confirmed coverage "across all nine divisions" of the CIF Southern Section, which is the same language used for the SoCal baseball POTW on the same platform. That means a Division V pitcher from Colton can appear on the same list as a Division I player from JSerra Catholic or Etiwanda. Division standing does not filter the field.

Targeting & customisation

What regions tend to be well-represented on the SoCal softball ballot?
The March 18 field shows the geographic spread the editors draw from: Inland Empire (Valley View, Etiwanda, Colton, Highland), south Orange County and coastal programs (Carlsbad, JSerra), the San Fernando Valley corridor (Simi Valley, Fullerton), and the 605/710 corridor (Downey, King in Riverside). No single county dominates the 10-name field.

Custom orders

Who appeared on the March 18, 2026 Southern California softball ballot?
The confirmed 10-nominee field was: Bella Hernandez (Valley View), Cheri Thompson (King), Chloe Hernandez (Carlsbad), Evalina Chavez (Highland), Andrea Varela (Colton), Hayley Brock (Fullerton), Mia Diaz (Etiwanda), Hazel Renteria (Downey), Allison Hinds (Simi Valley), and Annabel Raftery (JSerra Catholic). The field spans Inland Empire programs (Valley View, Etiwanda, Colton), coastal Orange County (Carlsbad, JSerra), the Antelope Valley (Highland), and the San Fernando Valley corridor (Simi Valley, Fullerton).
Does a win here connect to any CIF or MaxPreps postseason recognition?
No. The High School on SI fan vote is independent of CIF section awards, MaxPreps rankings, and any coach-voted or media-voted postseason honors. A player can win the weekly fan vote and not appear on any other award list, and vice versa. The two systems don't cross.
What do programs like Etiwanda and JSerra represent on these ballots?
Both are perennial CIF-SS postseason programs in their respective divisions. Etiwanda (Rancho Cucamonga) plays out of the Baseline League and consistently reaches late rounds of CIF-SS play. JSerra Catholic (San Juan Capistrano) draws from the Trinity League and competes in open/D-I brackets. Their appearing on the March 18 ballot alongside Inland Empire public schools like Valley View and Colton is exactly the cross-section this poll is designed to surface — private vs. public, coastal vs. inland, league powers vs. mid-classification programs.
Where can I find past Southern California softball Player of the Week winners?
Each week's winner is published on si.com/high-school/california with its own article; older ballot articles stay live. The hub page at si.com/high-school/california/athlete-of-the-week aggregates recent coverage, though it does not maintain a searchable historical archive of raw vote totals.

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.

From the blog — guides & case studies

Practical guides, technical deep-dives, and anonymized case studies.60+ articles. Selection rotates.

Victor Williams — founder of Buyvotescontest.com
Victor Williams
Online · usually replies in 5 min

Hi 👋 — drop your contest URL and I'll send a price quote within an hour. No card needed yet.