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Read more →The High School on SI regional fan vote for the best NE Florida prep softball performance of the week. SI editors choose the nominees — ten names on the April 2, 2026 ballot — anyone can vote with no account, and the poll closes Sunday at 11:59 p.m. Pacific, the same close as the SI football ballots in the region.
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The most useful thing to know arriving at the Northeast Florida Softball Player of the Week is not how it works — it is who actually ends up on it. The April 2, 2026 ballot had ten nominees across four counties and both public and private schools. That breadth is not incidental; it is the editorial posture of the ballot. SI's northeast Florida editors draw from Duval, St. Johns, Clay, and the outer corridor, and a ten-name field is substantially wider than the six-name football fields the same publication runs in the fall.
A ten-candidate field with no confirmed vote totals public means the decisive number — how many votes it takes to win a week here — is not on record. What is confirmed is the cap: the organizer's exact language states "we do not set limits on how many times a fan can vote during the competition." That language appeared on the NE Florida football poll and the Palm Beach County football poll from the same publisher; it applies here too. No ceiling means outcome is purely a function of how many people each nominee's community can reach before Sunday night.
A ten-name field also changes the math compared to a six-name football ballot. With ten nominees, a majority win becomes rare; a plurality in the twenties or thirties can be decisive if the rest of the field splits. The campaign that consolidates its community fastest does not need to be the biggest — it needs to be the most organized before Sunday at 11:59 p.m. Pacific.
The ten nominees on the April 2, 2026 ballot are worth reading school by school rather than as a list, because the institutions tell you as much as the individual names.
| Nominee | School | County / Type |
|---|---|---|
| Rommeney Patrey | Bartram Trail | St. Johns / public |
| Summer Stearns | Episcopal School of Jacksonville | Duval / private |
| Kalyn Willis | St. Augustine | St. Johns / public |
| Jamison Moore | Harvest Community | Duval / private |
| Kaelye Rouw | Clay | Clay / public |
| Hannah Jones | Tocoi Creek | St. Johns / public |
| Amaya Hyslop | Paxon School | Duval / public magnet |
| Bayleigh Girgis | Middleburg | Clay / public |
| Aleda Cashwell | Bolles | Duval / private |
| Makenna Christmas | First Coast | Duval / public |
Five of the ten are Duval County schools; three are St. Johns County programs; two come from Clay. Two of the ten are private FHSAA Independent schools — Bolles and Episcopal — sitting on the same ballot as the largest public programs in the region. Bolles and Episcopal both carry alumni networks that are smaller in raw headcount than a large Duval public school, but more concentrated and faster to activate digitally. That structural difference has decided fan polls in other sports in the Jacksonville market before.
St. Johns County's population growth over the last decade has made Bartram Trail and Tocoi Creek — two St. Johns programs on this ballot — into meaningful forces on regional fan votes. Bartram Trail's fanbase now extends across the Nocatee and Ponte Vedra corridors, a suburban network built on neighborhoods that run their own HOA and school group chats alongside the school's official booster presence. Two St. Johns nominees on the same ballot means those networks can work against each other, splitting the county's vote unless one of the two consolidates early.
Northeast Florida's fan-vote ecosystem across SI's spring softball polls runs on a Sunday close, which means the decisive hours are Saturday evening into Sunday afternoon. That is different from the football season rhythm in one important way: spring games finish on weekday afternoons and evenings, so the ballot often goes live Thursday or Friday with two full weekend days before the close — more time than a football poll that drops Sunday morning and closes the same night.
The community topology across this ten-school field is worth mapping before a campaign decides where to spend its energy. A Clay County program like Clay High or Middleburg sits in a tight-knit rural-suburban community where a poll link circulated through the softball team's parent group, the booster Facebook page, and the county high school sports Faceook group reaches a large share of engaged supporters within a few hours. The reach ceiling is lower in absolute terms, but the network is centralized enough to convert quickly.
A Jacksonville public school like Paxon or First Coast operates in a larger metro environment. The same link takes longer to travel from the team's immediate circle through alumni and community networks, and the fanbase is more dispersed geographically. Reach is higher in potential but requires more active distribution across more disconnected groups — school pages, alumni associations, neighborhood Facebook groups — before it converts to votes at scale.
Because the ballot is open and decided entirely by which community shows up before Sunday night, the contest is a reach problem. The how-to guide walks through the weekly fan-vote cadence in detail. For a broader picture of Florida fan-vote contests, see /usa/florida/; the national index is at /usa/.
The poll lives inside a dated article on si.com/high-school/florida — search "Northeast Florida High School Softball Player of the Week" to pull it up. Unlike a standalone leaderboard, the widget is embedded mid-article, so scroll past the nominee writeups to reach it. Older weeks' ballots remain accessible online; verify the date at the top before you start voting.
Each of the ten nominees is listed with the performance that earned the nomination — the opponent, the stat line, the result. Those details are only in the article text, not in the widget itself, and they give you the competitive context for the week's field before you commit.
Tap your player's name in the poll widget. The organizer explicitly confirms no limit on how many times a fan can vote during the competition, so supporters can return throughout the week. Each visit to the article page allows another vote; the poll resets with each page load.
The ballot closes Sunday at 11:59 p.m. Pacific. Posts on Saturday evening and a final push Sunday afternoon convert the most casual supporters before the window shuts. Votes cast after Sunday midnight PT do not count regardless of when the article was published.
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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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