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Central Florida High School Football Player of the Week: How Voting Works & How to Win

The High School on SI weekly fan vote covering Orange, Seminole, Indian River, and six adjacent Central Florida counties — unlimited voting, closes Sunday at 11:59 p.m. Pacific (not Monday like the Dallas regional), winner posted the following week on si.com/high-school/florida.

Run by: High School on SI (Sports Illustrated / formerly SBLive) Market: Orlando, FL Cadence: weekly Vote cap: Unlimited — no per-period vote cap posted by the organizer
Thematic photo for Central Florida High School Football Player of the Week showing Central Florida High School Football Player of the Week voting workflow

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A Hail Mary, two Vero Beach nominees, and what the week-16 field tells you

The most documented single ballot in the Central Florida Football Player of the Week record is from December 15, 2025 — state championship week — and it is worth reading carefully before anything else.

Noah Grubbs of Lake Mary went 25-for-48 for 333 yards and 3 touchdowns, finishing with a game-winning Hail Mary. That completion line — 52 percent on 48 attempts — describes a high-volume pass game under pressure, and the Hail Mary is the performance marker that generates its own attention before any organized fan effort begins. Vero Beach put two players on the same ballot: Jonathan Hillsman carried 19 times for 238 yards, and Jordan Crutchfield recorded three interceptions in the same game — the same team, the same Friday night, two of the five spots on the field. Jones High School in Orlando also placed two: dual-threat QB Dereon Coleman ran for 137 yards and two passing touchdowns; receiver Larry Miles caught 8 for 58 and a score.

What the field reveals structurally is that exceptional collective team games produce multi-nominee ballots, and both schools managed that in the same week. It also reveals the geographic range: Lake Mary is in Seminole County north of Orlando; Jones is urban Orange County; Vero Beach is on the Treasure Coast in Indian River County, roughly 90 miles east. All three on one five-name list — that is the span this poll covers.

The lesson from the week-16 data is the same one the Dallas ballot teaches: on a multi-nominee field where the ballot settles by pure turnout, the school that organizes its community before Sunday night determines the winner, not the school with the largest enrollment. A Class 5A Lake Mary competing against a Class 4A Jones and a Class 6A Vero Beach is not an imbalance — it is the format.

Seven counties, one Sunday deadline: the ballot's geographic structure

The Central Florida POTW ballot is not an Orlando-metro poll. It draws from a seven-county band that runs from Volusia County in the north, through Seminole and Orange in the I-4 corridor, south through Osceola and into Brevard, and east to Indian River on the Treasure Coast. Vero Beach appearing on the same week-16 ballot as Jones (Orange County) and Lake Mary (Seminole County) is not a quirk — it is what the geographic scope produces.

SchoolCountyFHSAA Class2025 ballot appearance
ApopkaOrange7A publicNamed powerhouse — ballot pool
Lake MarySeminole5A publicWeek 16 — QB Grubbs, Hail Mary, 333 yds
EdgewaterOrange (Orlando)5A publicNamed powerhouse — ballot pool
JonesOrange (Orlando)4A publicWeek 16 — Coleman + Miles, two nominees
Vero BeachIndian River6A publicWeek 16 — Hillsman + Crutchfield, two nominees
Dr. PhillipsOrange (Orlando)6A publicBallot pool
SeminoleSeminole (Sanford)6A publicBallot pool
OviedoSeminoleNot specifiedBallot pool
OsceolaOsceola (Kissimmee)6A publicBallot pool
WindermereOrangeNot specifiedBallot pool

The vote-mobilisation difference between these communities is real and structural. Apopka and Lake Mary draw on large Seminole and north Orange County suburb populations — parent communities that move through school apps, sports booster Facebook groups, and team notification channels. Jones and Edgewater are urban Orlando schools with neighborhood-rooted community ties and dense city networks. Vero Beach sits in a smaller coastal market, but Indian River County prep football has a loyalty level that the school's consistent ballot appearances confirm. None of these networks function the same way, and a campaign that understands which type it has — broad suburban, urban neighborhood, or tight coastal — builds its Sunday push accordingly.

The Central Florida ballot is one of four independent Florida regional football POTW ballots running simultaneously each week, all closing Sunday at 11:59 p.m. Pacific. Winning here does not advance a player to a statewide Florida ballot — it is a separate editorial process. See South Florida POTW and Tampa Bay POTW for the sibling regional ballots.

Sunday night is the contest — how Central Florida campaigns close

Sunday 11:59 p.m. Pacific is 2:59 a.m. Eastern on Monday. Every Florida-based school running a vote campaign on this ballot is working against that conversion. A Sunday-evening reminder — sent at 6 or 7 p.m. Eastern — lands when the ballot still has hours left and most teams have already gone quiet. A Monday-morning push arrives after it is closed.

The 2025 season confirmed polling weeks on September 1, September 8, October 27, November 17, November 24, December 1, and December 15. Articles typically post Monday or Tuesday after the weekend's games, which gives the ballot roughly five to six days of visibility — but real vote-moving compresses into the final 24 hours as Saturday and Sunday mobilization kicks in across the seven-county field.

Getting a player onto the ballot is the prior step. The SI Florida desk builds the field from coach and reader submissions alongside its own reporting. A submission that arrives by Saturday night with the full stat line, the opponent, the score, and a position note gives the editors what they need before the next ballot takes shape. A performance that nobody flags can be missed regardless of how good it was — as Vero Beach's double nomination in week 16 shows, the desk rewards comprehensive game-stat packages, not just individual highlights.

Once the ballot is live, the poll is uncapped, and the contest is reach: how many real people from your school's community find the article and vote before Sunday night. Because the format is fully settled by fan turnout, vote-support campaigns exist for weekly polls of this structure.

How to vote in Central Florida High School Football Player of the Week

  1. 1

    Find the current week's Central Florida article on si.com

    The poll lives inside a dated article at si.com/high-school/florida, not on a standalone page. After Thursday and Friday games, look for the newest "Vote: Who is the Central Florida High School Football Player of the Week?" post — the title includes the date. Older weeks' widgets stay live online, so confirm you are on the right article before clicking.

  2. 2

    Read the nominee stat lines before picking

    Each candidate is listed with the performance that earned the nod: rushing totals, passing lines, interceptions, the opponent and outcome. Week-16 nominees ranged from a Hail Mary touchdown to 238 rushing yards to three interceptions — the write-ups are the only place you see what each player did, so they are worth a minute.

  3. 3

    Click your nominee and return through the week

    Select your player in the embedded widget and submit. The organizer posts no cap on how often a fan can vote during the open window, so one supporter can return to the same article multiple times before Sunday's close. No account creation and no registration step are required.

  4. 4

    Time your final push for Sunday evening Florida time

    The poll closes Sunday at 11:59 p.m. Pacific, which is 2:59 a.m. Eastern on Monday. That means the last effective window for Florida-based voters is Sunday evening — not Monday, unlike the Dallas regional ballot that runs a full day longer. A Sunday-afternoon reminder sent to school and booster channels lands when the ballot still has several hours left and most competitors have gone quiet.

Central Florida High School Football Player of the Week — frequently asked questions

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

Legality & scope

What does automated voting risk on this poll, specifically?
The SI platform monitors for automated traffic patterns. Scripted or bot-generated submissions that arrive at non-human rates from data-center IP ranges produce signals the system can identify, and detected votes are removed from the tally. The organizer's unlimited-voting language is addressed to fans voting manually — not to scripts generating high-frequency submissions. The risk is vote removal; no account exists to ban.

Process & delivery

When exactly does the Central Florida Football POTW close, and what does that mean for Florida voters?
The poll closes Sunday at 11:59 p.m. Pacific — which converts to 2:59 a.m. Eastern Time on Monday morning. Florida-based supporters whose instinct is to push votes Monday afternoon are already too late. The practical last window is Sunday evening, and a reminder that goes out at 6 or 7 p.m. Eastern still has several hours of voting left. This is meaningfully different from the Dallas / North Texas regional ballot, which closes Monday night and gives DFW campaigns an extra full day.
Is the Sunday close the same deadline used by all Florida regional football ballots?
Yes — all confirmed Florida regional High School on SI Football POTW ballots close Sunday at 11:59 p.m. Pacific, including South Florida and Tampa Bay. This puts every Florida region on the same Sunday-night calendar, which is different from the Texas regional structure where the four Texas regional ballots close Monday. A Florida supporter who misses Sunday night has no Monday extension; the week is decided.

Service quality

Where do vote-support services fit for a Sunday-close poll like this one?
Because the Central Florida ballot closes Sunday night rather than Monday, the useful window for any organized push is shorter than in Dallas-style polls. A real-audience <a href="/buy-sports-fan-poll-votes/">sports fan-poll vote service</a> that delivers votes in paced increments through the week fits the format better than a Monday-night surge that arrives after the ballot is already closed.

Platform specifics

Which seven counties does the Central Florida football ballot cover?
The confirmed coverage area spans Orange, Seminole, Indian River, Osceola, Lake, Volusia, and Brevard counties — a geographic band running roughly 90 miles from Volusia in the north down through Orange and Osceola, and east to the Treasure Coast (Indian River / Brevard). This is an independent ballot from the South Florida regional (Miami-Dade and Broward), the Tampa Bay regional (Hillsborough, Pinellas, Pasco, Hernando), and the Northeast Florida regional. Each has its own weekly nominees and its own vote count.
How does a Central Florida athlete get nominated for this poll?
The SI Florida editorial desk curates the weekly field from coach and reader submissions and its own game coverage. Submitting a performance is worth doing: include the athlete's full name, school, position, the complete stat line, the opponent, the score, and a brief coach quote if available. The desk weighs newsworthy performances across all seven confirmed counties, so a Vero Beach nominee on the Treasure Coast competes for a ballot spot against Orange County and Seminole County submissions from the same week. The submission channel is the SI Florida page — no direct editor email is publicly confirmed for the Florida desk, unlike the Texas ballot which lists a named contact.

Custom orders

Who were the confirmed nominees on the week-16 December 15, 2025 ballot?
Five nominees appeared on the week-16 ballot during state championship week. Noah Grubbs (Lake Mary, QB) completed 25 of 48 passes for 333 yards and 3 touchdowns, including a game-winning Hail Mary. Jonathan Hillsman (Vero Beach, RB) carried 19 times for 238 yards. Jordan Crutchfield (Vero Beach, DB) recorded three interceptions. Dereon Coleman (Jones, QB) ran 29 times for 137 yards and a touchdown while going 13-for-19 for 163 yards and 2 passing touchdowns. Larry Miles (Jones, WR) caught 8 passes for 58 yards and a score.
How unusual is it for the same school to have two nominees on the same ballot?
The week-16 field had it happen twice over. Vero Beach placed both Jonathan Hillsman and Jordan Crutchfield — a 238-yard rusher and a three-interception defensive back from the same game. Jones in Orlando placed both Dereon Coleman and Larry Miles — a dual-threat QB and his top receiver. When a program plays an exceptional collective game in a high-stakes week, the SI Florida desk can and does nominate multiple players from the same roster. It does not split the vote pool; each nominee competes independently.
What made Noah Grubbs's Lake Mary performance stand out among the week-16 nominees?
A 25-48 completion line is not a headline figure on its own — 52 percent completion in a 48-attempt game suggests a pass-heavy game plan under pressure. What makes it the week's marquee performance is the game-winning Hail Mary, which produced a verified 333-yard, 3-touchdown line in what was apparently a state-championship-period game. A single play that decides the outcome of a playoff game generates a specific kind of attention — the kind that converts into votes on its own before any organized push begins.
What FHSAA classifications appear on the Central Florida ballot, and does class size affect vote outcomes?
The confirmed Central Florida ballot pool spans Class 4A through Class 7A public programs. Apopka competes at Class 7A — among the largest FHSAA public classifications — while Vero Beach is Class 6A, Lake Mary and Edgewater are Class 5A, and Jones in Orlando is Class 4A. Class size does not determine the outcome here: a Class 4A school like Jones placed two nominees on the same week-16 ballot as a Class 5A Lake Mary quarterback, and which school's community shows up before Sunday night is the only variable that matters.
Does winning the Central Florida Football POTW lead to any statewide recognition?
The Central Florida Football POTW and the statewide Florida High School Athlete of the Week poll are independent editorial selections. A Central Florida Football POTW win is published on si.com and searchable by name — useful for a player whose recruiting timeline overlaps with I-4 corridor or Treasure Coast college programs following the prep market. It does not carry over into the statewide ballot; that field is assembled separately and covers all FHSAA sports, not just football.
How does the Central Florida ballot compare to the South Florida regional?
The South Florida ballot (Miami-Dade and Broward) draws heavily from private programs — Chaminade-Madonna, St. Thomas Aquinas, American Heritage — whose multi-state alumni networks produce voter bases that reach well outside Florida. The Central Florida ballot is predominantly large public programs whose communities are suburban and urban Florida residents. That means Central Florida vote mobilisation runs through school booster channels, neighborhood Facebook groups, and team communications — not national diaspora chains. South Florida's confirmed ballot weeks in 2025 reached up to 18 nominees in peak weeks; Central Florida's week-16 field had five.
Where can I see past Central Florida Football POTW winners?
Each week's winner is written up on si.com/high-school/florida, and older ballot articles stay online — so the archive is the accumulated set of dated articles. The 2025 season had confirmed polls on at least September 1, September 8, October 27, November 17, November 24, December 1, and December 15. No central aggregator outside SI holds the full results history.
Can a player from Vero Beach — 90 miles from Orlando — realistically win over an Orange County school?
The week-16 ballot answers that directly: Vero Beach placed two nominees — Hillsman and Crutchfield — in a five-name field that also included two Orlando-area schools (Jones) and a Seminole County school (Lake Mary). Indian River County prep football draws an intensely local audience; Vero Beach's presence on multiple 2025 ballots confirms the Treasure Coast community votes with a participation rate that closes the raw distance. Whether the coastal school or the suburban I-4 school wins comes down to which community organizes before Sunday night, not which city is closer to Orlando.

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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