How to Win a Facebook Photo Contest in 2026
Step-by-step playbook for winning Facebook photo contests in 2026 — vote-boosting strategy, safe promotion, and the critical 48-hour sprint.
Read more →High School on SI's weekly fan vote for the best boys basketball performance in Miami-Dade and Broward County. The ballot closes Sunday 11:59 p.m. Eastern — one of the few SI polls that runs on ET rather than PT — with unlimited voting and no account required.
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.
Sunday at 11:59 p.m. Eastern. That is when this ballot closes. Not Pacific.
For anyone who follows other SI regional polls in Florida, or national fan votes that run to a Pacific close, the difference is two full hours — and it has ended more than a few South Florida basketball campaigns that thought they had time left. A team group chat reminder that goes out at 10:30 p.m. ET lands after the ballot is already shut. The booster post that assumes a West Coast-style close is posting into a closed poll.
The South Florida boys basketball Player of the Week ballot confirmed this explicitly in the Feb 17, 2025 edition: "Voting will close on Sunday, February 23 at 11:59 p.m. Eastern Time." That is the rare SI poll that uses Eastern rather than Pacific — most Florida fans never notice until they lose a race they thought they were winning. So the first correction for any campaign here is simply getting the close time right. Everything else is downstream of that. Treat Sunday as an ET deadline from the moment the ballot goes live, and the whole operation changes: the push goes out before dinner, not after. The final reminder hits mid-afternoon, not late at night. And two hours of potential votes do not disappear unclaimed.
The ten-player field from February 2025 is the clearest window available into how this poll actually works. Seven programs. Two counties. Three school types.
Caleb Gaskins of Columbus led the write-up with a 12-of-12 field-goal game — 29 points against Doral Academy without a single miss. In a ballot where most nominations arrive attached to high point totals, a zero-miss shooting line is a different kind of stat. It is the type of number that circulates on its own in a text message, that needs no explanation. SI editors highlighted it above other strong nominees that week, and the Gaskins nomination is also a data point about Columbus itself: a Miami-Dade 7A public school with deep city basketball roots whose alumni and fan base span both counties.
Two schools had two nominees each — Pembroke Pines Charter (Maximo Ortega and Zemari Days) and Westminster Academy (Alex Constanza and Alex Lloyd). That split creates a mathematical problem that does not get discussed enough. When two players from one school share the ballot, every vote for nominee A is a vote not going to nominee B. In a ten-player field where most schools have a single representative, the split-vote schools are at a real structural disadvantage even when their communities turn out at equal rates. The votes dilute; the totals do not add.
| Nominee | School | County | School Type |
|---|---|---|---|
| Caleb Gaskins | Columbus | Miami-Dade | Public 7A |
| Dwayne Wimbley Jr. | St. Thomas Aquinas | Broward | Catholic independent |
| Maximo Ortega | Pembroke Pines Charter | Broward | Charter |
| Zemari Days | Pembroke Pines Charter | Broward | Charter |
| Miguel Orbe | Miami Country Day | Miami-Dade | Private independent |
| Alex Constanza | Westminster Academy | Broward | Private independent |
| Alex Lloyd | Westminster Academy | Broward | Private independent |
| Matthew Able | Sagemont | Broward | Private independent |
| Kevin Thomas | Sagemont | Broward | Private independent |
| Juawayne Walters | Boyd Anderson | Broward | Public |
Read it as a campaign map, not a roster. Five of the ten nominees came from private or charter programs — St. Thomas Aquinas, Westminster, Sagemont, Miami Country Day, and two from Pembroke Pines Charter. Those schools tend to run tighter internal communication: school apps, parish chains, organized booster lists. That is not a generalization — it is what distinguishes a Broward Catholic school's alumni network from a 7A public school's broader but looser social media reach. One moves faster. The other has more people who, if reached, will vote. Knowing which type your program is shapes how you actually build a Sunday campaign.
Two counties. Different ecosystems.
Miami-Dade carries Columbus, Miami Country Day, and the city's deep history of producing high-level guards. The public 7A programs here are large, spread across neighborhoods, and draw fans through community ties more than organized booster infrastructure. Broward is where St. Thomas Aquinas, Westminster Academy, Sagemont, and American Heritage Plantation cluster — private and independent programs that recruit heavily and pull from communities well outside their ZIP codes. A St. Thomas Aquinas fan base is not just Fort Lauderdale; it is every Catholic family across Broward who sent a kid there or considers the Raiders their team.
The county split shapes how votes travel. A Broward private school's alumni scatter across the county and beyond, but they share a specific institutional identity — the parish, the program — that makes a group-text campaign cohesive. A Miami-Dade public school's supporters are more neighborhood-concentrated, but the school is often a genuine community anchor that activates fast when the neighborhood's attention is on it. Boyd Anderson in Lauderdale Lakes operates on a different model entirely: a Broward public school whose community is specific, neighborhood-rooted, and likely to move as a unit when a nominee appears.
Neither profile is inherently stronger on a fan poll. The question is always which one actually organizes within the ET Sunday window — and which one assumes it has two more hours than it does. The how-to guide covers the weekly cadence mechanics for recurring open polls like this one.
The ballot lives inside a dated article on si.com/high-school/florida — not on a permanent landing page. After each week's games, go to the site and look for the newest "South Florida High School Boys Basketball Player of the Week" post. Older polls stay visible but are closed, so confirm the publish date before you start voting.
Each entry includes the performance that earned the nomination — points, shooting splits, opponent, and outcome. For a poll covering both Miami-Dade and Broward, the field typically spans public 7A programs, private independents, and charter schools; reading the write-ups tells you which communities will be the most activated voters.
Tap your player in the embedded widget. No account or login is required, and voting is unlimited until the poll closes. One motivated supporter can return multiple times through Sunday, but the larger gain comes from getting more people to the link — each visiting once — rather than one device cycling repeatedly.
The South Florida basketball poll closes Sunday 11:59 p.m. Eastern. That is two hours earlier than a Pacific-close equivalent, which is what many Florida fans expect from SI's other regional polls. A campaign that pins the ET deadline on Sunday morning — and does not let the night slip past unnoticed — is the one that finishes with votes still flowing in.
14 answers covering legality, delivery, quality, pricing and platform specifics.
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.
Practical guides, technical deep-dives, and anonymized case studies.60+ articles. Selection rotates.
Step-by-step playbook for winning Facebook photo contests in 2026 — vote-boosting strategy, safe promotion, and the critical 48-hour sprint.
Read more →
Complete guide to sourcing US-based Facebook contest votes in 2026 — pricing benchmarks by tier, voter behavior patterns, and geo-targeting best practices.
Read more →
Instagram vs TikTok for contest votes in 2026 — vote mechanics, cost per vote, audience reach, detection risk, and which platform fits your competition type.
Read more →
How tech brands can run and win Twitter/X contests in 2026 — vote strategy, developer-community engagement, vote acquisition, and metrics that matter.
Read more →
The complete 2026 guide to email-verified contest votes — system mechanics, vote sourcing, provider evaluation, campaign timing, and risk management frameworks.
Read more →
Run and win Facebook restaurant photo contests in 2026 — vote tactics, customer mobilization, content formats, and turning a contest win into paying guests. Start now.
Read more →
Hi 👋 — drop your contest URL and I'll send a price quote within an hour. No card needed yet.