Skip to main content

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

High School on SI's weekly fan-vote poll for Tallahassee-area prep football — Leon, Wakulla, Taylor, Madison, and Franklin counties — with unlimited voting and a Sunday 11:59 p.m. PT close. On Oct 28, 2025, all four major Leon County programs appeared on the same ballot.

Run by: High School on SI / SBLive Market: Tallahassee, FL Cadence: weekly Vote cap: Unlimited — the organizer states: "We do not set limits on how many times a fan can vote during the competition."
Thematic photo for Florida Big Bend High School Football Player of the Week showing Florida Big Bend High School Football 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.

Lazarus Chambers ran 33 times and threw 25 passes in the same game — and still shared a ballot

Start with the October ballot's most eye-catching line. Lazarus Chambers of Godby ran 33 carries for 201 yards and also went 13-of-25 for 205 pass yards, collecting three touchdowns in a single game. Over 400 combined yards of offense in a high school game is not routine, and it still did not clear the field. Karlise Price of Rickards scored four rushing touchdowns on the same ballot. Bez Glanton of Taylor County hit four passing touchdowns on 16-of-22 throwing. Alex Assantes of Chiles returned an interception 85 yards for a touchdown and also had a fumble recovery touchdown on defense.

That is what the Oct 28, 2025 Big Bend ballot actually looked like — six nominees, four of them from Leon County's major Tallahassee programs, two from coastal bend schools more than an hour's drive from the capital. A dual-threat performance worth 400 combined yards did not dominate the discussion because the week happened to be rich across the entire region. The winner of that cycle is not documented in the confirmed facts, which means the outcome of one of Florida prep football's more interesting weekly ballots was determined by fan votes — not by any obvious statistical standout.

That is the first thing to understand about this poll: on a week where the data is close, the community behind each nominee matters more than the stat line in front of it.

Tallahassee, the coastal counties, and why this poll's geography is unusual

The Big Bend is named for the distinctive curve where Florida's Gulf coast bends westward — the place where the peninsula stops pointing south and the coastline runs toward the Panhandle. The High School on SI football poll that carries the name centers on Tallahassee and extends into the counties that form the bend: Wakulla directly south, Taylor southeast toward Perry, Franklin on the coast at Carrabelle, Madison east toward the Georgia line.

That geography produces an unusual poll structure. Four of the six confirmed Oct 28 nominees came from Leon County programs in Tallahassee — Rickards, Godby, Lincoln, Chiles — all within about fifteen miles of each other. The other two came from Perry (Taylor County, 70 miles southeast) and Carrabelle (Franklin County, 80 miles south on the coast). On the same ballot: a state capital city with two universities and a civic professional class, and a coastal fishing community with a school small enough that a single exceptional individual performance is the realistic path to a nomination.

ProgramCountyOct 28 nomineePerformance
RickardsLeon (Tallahassee)Karlise Price21 carries, 191 yds, 4 TDs
GodbyLeon (Tallahassee)Lazarus Chambers33 car, 201 rush yds; 13-25, 205 pass yds, 3 TDs
LincolnLeon (Tallahassee)Tadarius Huggins146 rush yds, 2 TDs
ChilesLeon (Tallahassee)Alex Assantes15 tkl, 1 sack, fumble TD; 85-yd INT return TD
Taylor CountyTaylor (Perry)Bez Glanton16-22, 259 pass yds, 4 TDs
Franklin CountyFranklin (Carrabelle)Maddox Shaw217 rush yds, 2 TDs

Tallahassee is Florida's state capital and home to Florida State University and Florida A&M University — two institutions whose alumni and staff networks extend well beyond the metro. A Leon County program reaching into FSU or FAMU alumni groups is reaching a population that spans the entire state, not just Tallahassee. A rural coastal-bend program has no equivalent extended network, but it has something different: a tight community where every adult who has ever attended a Friday night game is reachable through two or three social connections. Maddox Shaw's 217-yard rushing game is the kind of performance that activates that community completely.

The Tallahassee programs also face a specific complication: Godby and Chiles are the two schools confirmed in the source facts as appearing on both the Big Bend poll and the Panhandle poll in different 2025 weeks. Supporters of any Godby or Chiles athlete need to identify which ballot their player is on before sharing — a link to the Panhandle poll helps nobody in a Big Bend week, and vice versa.

Poll mechanics and what Sunday close means for the outreach window

The poll lives inside an article on si.com/high-school/florida, not on a standalone voting page. Each week the editors publish a new Big Bend nomination post and embed the voting widget inside it. The current week's article has its own URL; the Oct 28 confirmed URL is documented in this guide's contest fields. Future weeks generate new URLs. The hub at si.com/high-school/florida is where to find the latest.

DetailConfirmed fact
OrganizerHigh School on SI / SBLive (si.com/high-school/florida)
ScopeLeon, Wakulla, Taylor, Madison, Franklin counties and adjacent areas
Vote capNone — "We do not set limits on how many times a fan can vote during the competition"
Close day and timeSunday 11:59 p.m. PT (Nov 2 confirmed for Oct 28 cycle)
Winner announcedFollowing week
Confirmed 2025 cyclesSept 7, Oct 28 (Oct 28 fully documented with six nominees)

The Sunday close distinguishes this poll from the SI Texas regional polls, which run to Monday night. Here the decisive hours are Friday through Sunday. That window shapes the outreach differently: there is no Monday grace period to fall back on. A campaign that posts Sunday morning and again Sunday afternoon is working the real closing pressure. One that waits until Monday morning has missed it.

Because SI runs multiple Florida regional football polls simultaneously, the one structural friction point in this poll is headline confirmation. Share the Big Bend article URL directly — not a screenshot, not the Florida hub homepage. Supporters who click a link that lands on the Panhandle ballot and vote there will not see that vote reflected on the Big Bend result. The article URL is the only unambiguous share.

Running a campaign from Tallahassee to the coast

The Big Bend poll is won by reach, and the geography here is an asset for the right campaign. Tallahassee is a compact city by Florida standards — about 200,000 in the metro — but its population is unusually networked. State government, FSU, and FAMU create professional and alumni communities where school loyalty travels far. A parent who works at the Capitol and texts a Leon County booster group has indirect reach into networks that span the whole state. That is not available to most comparably sized Florida markets.

The coastal-bend programs work differently. Franklin County's Carrabelle and Taylor County's Perry are small communities where the football program is often the most prominent shared civic institution. A nominee from either school activates that community at a density that Tallahassee's dispersed metro cannot match per capita. Maddox Shaw's 217-yard night for Franklin County is the kind of individual performance that has an entire town forwarding the same article. The campaign for a small coastal-bend nominee is not about breadth — it is about reaching everyone in the county before the Sunday close.

For either type of program, the campaign starts with the direct article URL shared at the moment of publication. Because two 2025 cycles are confirmed (September and October), the poll runs across the full regular season and into the playoffs. Watching the SI Florida hub from August onward is the only reliable way to catch a nomination the moment it posts — a great game that gets a nomination on Thursday that nobody shares until Saturday has already surrendered two of the five days in the window. For campaigns that need to close a gap before Sunday, structured vote support is built for exactly this format and timeline.

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

  1. 1

    Find this week's Big Bend article, not a different Florida regional ballot

    Go to si.com/high-school/florida and locate the current football Player of the Week post. High School on SI runs six separate Florida regional football ballots simultaneously every week — Big Bend, Panhandle, Northeast Florida, and others. The article you want has "Big Bend" in its headline. Sharing a link to the wrong regional ballot sends your supporters to a poll that will not count for your nominee.

  2. 2

    Read each nominee's stat line before you vote

    The nomination article lists each player's name, school, position, and the game performance that earned them the nod. On the Oct 28, 2025 ballot those ranged from Bez Glanton's 259 passing yards and four touchdowns to Alex Assantes's 85-yard interception return. The stat lines are the only place the field is explained — worth a minute before you commit.

  3. 3

    Cast your vote through the embedded widget, then return before Sunday

    Select your nominee in the embedded poll widget on the article page. The organizer states explicitly: "We do not set limits on how many times a fan can vote during the competition." That means one supporter can return through the week, but the most meaningful gains come from reaching more people — not cycling one device repeatedly. The window closes Sunday 11:59 p.m. PT.

  4. 4

    Share the exact article URL, not the Florida hub homepage

    Copy the direct link to the Big Bend article and distribute it through team family chats, school athletic accounts, and any Leon County or coastal-bend community groups you can reach. A generic si.com/high-school/florida link drops supporters on the hub where they may land on the wrong regional ballot. The Big Bend article URL is unambiguous; it is the only share worth making.

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

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

Legality & scope

What does the organizer say about automated or bot-assisted voting?
SI's poll terms allow unlimited manual fan voting and encourage sharing. What they do not permit is automated scripts or software designed to simulate fan activity — votes submitted that way can be removed. The distinction matters in practice: the Oct 28 field included six nominees with comparable stat lines, which means the outcome was decided by which community reached more real people before Sunday close, not by mechanical repetition on a single device.

Process & delivery

Why does the Big Bend poll close Sunday when the Dallas regional closes Monday?
High School on SI's Texas regional polls — including Dallas / North Texas — close Monday 11:59 p.m. PT, giving those markets an extra day. The Florida regional polls, Big Bend included, close Sunday 11:59 p.m. PT. That means the critical push window here is Friday through Sunday evening, not the extended Monday run available to DFW supporters. Plan the final outreach for Sunday afternoon and evening, not the next morning.
How exactly does the vote cap work — does the organizer say anything specific?
Yes. The organizer's own language is: "We do not set limits on how many times a fan can vote during the competition." That is meaningfully different from some Florida prep polls that impose a once-daily cap. Here, a supporter who votes Monday morning and again Sunday night is not violating any posted rule — both votes count under the organizer's stated terms.
When in the season do confirmed Big Bend polls run?
Two 2025 cycles are confirmed by date: Sept 7 and Oct 28. The Sept 7 cycle predates the FHSAA regular-season climax; the Oct 28 cycle fell during the playoff bracket, when Rickards, Godby, Lincoln, Chiles, Taylor County, and Franklin County all had teams still in contention. That timing matters — playoff weeks tend to generate stronger individual stat lines and more motivated fan bases, which is reflected in the Oct 28 field's depth. The SI Florida poll pattern strongly suggests cycles run from August through December, but only these two dates are confirmed for Big Bend football.

Service quality

What makes Tallahassee a different outreach environment from most regional poll markets?
Tallahassee is Florida's state capital and home to both Florida State University and Florida A&M University. A Leon County program reaching FSU or FAMU alumni networks is reaching a population dispersed across the entire state — not just the local metro. That extended reach is a structural advantage the Oct 28 Tallahassee programs had over Taylor County and Franklin County, whose vote potential was geographically bounded by the county line. On the Oct 28 ballot, four of the six nominees came from inside that network, which explains why the ballot was so competitive despite the coastal-bend schools posting strong individual stat lines.
Where do vote-support services fit for an open unlimited poll like this one?
Because the poll is uncapped and decided entirely by which nominee's network turns out before Sunday, the contest is a mobilization problem. Services like <a href="/buy-sports-fan-poll-votes/">sports fan poll vote support</a> exist for exactly this format — a public, weekly, regionally anchored poll where margin is determined by reach, not by any fixed vote ceiling.

Custom orders

Who were the six confirmed Oct 28, 2025 Big Bend nominees and what did they do?
Bez Glanton of Taylor County — 16-of-22, 259 pass yards, 4 touchdowns. Lazarus Chambers of Godby — 33 carries, 201 rush yards; 13-of-25, 205 pass yards, 3 touchdowns. Tadarius Huggins of Lincoln — 146 rush yards, 2 touchdowns. Karlise Price of Rickards — 21 carries, 191 yards, 4 touchdowns. Maddox Shaw of Franklin County — 217 rush yards, 2 touchdowns. Alex Assantes of Chiles — 15 tackles, 1 sack, a fumble returned for a touchdown, and an 85-yard interception return touchdown. This is the only fully documented ballot in the confirmed research facts for this poll.
If Godby appears on both the Big Bend and the Panhandle ballot, which one counts for my player?
Check the current week's article headline. The confirmed facts note that Godby and Chiles each appeared on both the Big Bend poll and the Panhandle poll in different 2025 weeks — Godby via Lazarus Chambers on Oct 28 for Big Bend, and via Landon Dougherty on Nov 25 for the Panhandle ballot. The organizer decides week by week which regional ballot carries which programs. There is no standing assignment; the article you are sharing from is the authoritative answer for that week.
Why was Alex Assantes — a defensive back — nominated in a week with three high-scoring backs?
Because his Oct 28 line was impossible to overlook: 15 tackles, a sack, a fumble recovery touchdown, and an 85-yard interception return touchdown. Two defensive scores on the same night is unusual enough that SI's editors included him alongside Godby's Lazarus Chambers, who put up over 400 combined yards. The Big Bend ballot does not filter by position or by offense-first — it rewards the week's standout performance, and two defensive touchdowns is a standout performance.
Can a rural coastal-bend school like Franklin County beat a Tallahassee program on the ballot?
It is structurally possible. Maddox Shaw of Franklin County ran for 217 yards and two touchdowns on Oct 28 — a performance that easily stood next to the stat lines from Rickards and Lincoln. Franklin County, based in Carrabelle on the Gulf coast, draws from a much smaller community than Leon County's four programs. A smaller community that turns out in full — family networks, local civic accounts, county sports pages — can reach a concentrated vote total that the larger schools, spread across a metro area of 300,000, do not always match. The stat line earns the nomination; the community decides what happens next.
Does winning the Big Bend poll carry over to any statewide Florida recognition?
No. The Big Bend poll is an independent weekly editorial product from High School on SI. Winning it earns recognition in that week's SI Florida article, but there is no confirmed mechanism by which a Big Bend winner is automatically elevated to any FHSAA statewide award or a state-level SI ballot. A player could appear on both in different weeks as separate editorial decisions, but a regional win does not transfer.
How are Big Bend nominees chosen, and who decides which counties are in scope?
SI's editors select nominees each week from that week's prep football results across Leon, Wakulla, Taylor, Madison, Franklin, and adjacent counties. No nomination email or submission contact is specified in the confirmed research facts for the Big Bend poll — unlike the Dallas poll, where a named editor contact is documented. If your athlete had an exceptional week and is not appearing on the ballot, the SI Florida hub is the starting point to understand the current editorial process.
Are all four major Leon County programs always on the same ballot?
Not necessarily. The Oct 28, 2025 ballot was unusual in that Rickards, Godby, Lincoln, and Chiles all appeared simultaneously — four of the six nominees drawn from Leon County's major public programs. That density reflects a week when every Leon County school happened to produce a standout individual performance. In weeks when the results are more spread, the ballot may draw more heavily from the coastal-bend counties and fewer Tallahassee programs will appear.
Where can I find past Big Bend weekly winners and results?
The archived SI Florida article for each cycle is the only public record. The confirmed facts document nominee names and stats for Oct 28, 2025, but no winner by name for either the Sept 7 or Oct 28 cycles. Searching si.com/high-school/florida for prior Big Bend articles is the path to historical results — each poll article stays live after the ballot closes, with the winner write-up added the following week.

Sources

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.