IP Rotation for Contest Votes: Ultimate 2026 Buyer's Guide
How IP rotation works for contest votes — proxy quality tiers, rotation strategies, provider vetting criteria, delivery failure diagnosis, and 2026 pricing benchmarks.
Read more →The High School on SI fan vote for the best girls basketball performance in the Jacksonville metro each week. Editors nominate standout players from Duval, Clay, St. Johns, Nassau, and Putnam counties; anyone can vote with no account from December through March, with the poll closing Sunday at 11:59 p.m. Pacific.
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 most useful thing to know about the Northeast Florida Girls Basketball Player of the Week poll is the thing the public record does not yet hold: no confirmed individual nominees or vote totals have been published beyond the poll's existence and dates. That is not a reason to dismiss the ballot — it is the reason to understand what kind of contest this is.
High School on SI confirmed polls on January 7 and January 24, 2025 for this exact regional ballot, running the same unlimited-voting, Sunday-close mechanic as every other NE Florida SI poll. What the absence of a published nominee archive tells you is that this ballot lives and dies in a concentrated local window. There is no statewide feed amplifying each week's result. There is no leaderboard that draws casual national attention. The voters here are specifically Jacksonville-area basketball followers, and the campaigns that win are the ones that reach that audience before Sunday night.
That structural reality has a practical implication. On a ballot with wider public visibility, a late surge from outside the community can shift a result. Here, the decisive votes come from the same five-county metro — Duval, Clay, St. Johns, Nassau, Putnam — that the nominees play in. Every campaign starts and ends with how many people from that geography you can activate in a week.
The Jacksonville metro runs one of the more structurally varied girls basketball markets in Florida. Three private schools — Bolles, Episcopal School of Jacksonville, and Bishop Kenny — compete as FHSAA Independents and draw on alumni networks that are dense and geographically concentrated. A Bolles graduate now living in Ponte Vedra or Fernandina Beach still follows the Bulldogs. Bishop Kenny's Catholic school network extends through parishes across the Southside and the Beaches. That kind of tight alumni infrastructure moves faster on a Sunday poll than a larger public school's dispersed fan base.
The public tier is anchored by Bartram Trail in St. Johns County, which competes at the 7A level and has the enrollment to match it. Tocoi Creek, a newer St. Johns County school, has entered the competitive mix. On the Duval County side, Mandarin, Terry Parker, First Coast, and Paxon each pull from distinct Jacksonville neighborhoods — communities that identify strongly with their schools and can mobilize when a nominee appears. Clay County schools add the outer-county dimension to a ballot that is not just a Jacksonville city contest.
The FHSAA classification system matters for playoff seeding; on a fan-vote ballot it does not. An Independent private school and a 7A public school can appear on the same weekly field, and which community turns out before Sunday decides who wins — not enrollment, not conference record.
Two things govern outcomes here: getting on the ballot, and moving real people to it before Sunday night closes the window.
Getting nominated starts with the stat line. SI's Northeast Florida editors build the field from game results submitted by coaches and school contacts — the same nomination process confirmed across every Florida SI regional poll. A performance that nobody flags by Thursday risks being missed. Full box score, opponent name, final score, and position — submitted to the SI Florida editorial team via their regional contact — gives an editor the information needed to write the nominee entry. A game that happens Friday needs someone sending an email by Saturday at the latest.
Once the poll is live, the job is reach before Sunday. The ballot is uncapped, so a single device revisiting all week accumulates some votes. But a Sunday afternoon push that gets the link to two hundred people who each vote once outperforms a single phone voting for days. The team group chat, the booster Facebook page, the school's Instagram story — those are the channels, and they all need to run on Sunday before the 11:59 p.m. Pacific close. For campaigns that need to extend reach beyond the immediate team network, vote-support options exist for open, uncapped regional polls like this one.
For the general mechanics of how weekly fan-vote polls work and how campaigns are structured, the how-to guide covers the recurring-ballot cadence. The broader Florida fan-vote directory maps the other SI regional polls running in the state. The national directory of high school fan-vote contests is at /usa/.
The ballot lives inside a dated article on si.com/high-school/florida — not on a static landing page. After the week's games wrap up, search for "Northeast Florida High School Girls Basketball Player of the Week" and open the most recently dated post. Older ballots stay live online and will still accept votes, so confirming the date before you start is worth the extra second.
Each candidate appears with the performance that earned the nod: points, rebounds, assists, and the opponent. SI's editors write those lines from the game results submitted by coaches and reporters, and they are the only place the full field is explained in one place.
Select your player in the poll widget on the page. No account, login, or email address is required. The page accepts repeat votes — you can return throughout the week — and the only hard stop is Sunday at 11:59 p.m. Pacific.
Because the poll closes Sunday night, the highest-use moment is the final few hours — when casual voters have stopped checking but the ballot is still open. A text sent to the player's team group and a booster-page post late Sunday afternoon consistently delivers votes into a window that is otherwise going quiet.
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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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