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Georgia High School Football Defensive Player of the Week: How Voting Works & How to Win

A dedicated statewide defensive fan poll on High School on SI — launched 2025 to give Georgia linebackers, D-linemen, and defensive backs their own weekly ballot, separate from the North and South Georgia offensive POTW polls; 15 nominees on the opening ballot; unlimited voting closes Sunday 11:59 p.m. PT.

Run by: High School on SI Cadence: weekly Vote cap: Unlimited — no per-period vote cap posted
Thematic photo for Georgia High School Football Defensive Player of the Week showing Georgia High School Football Defensive Player of the Week voting workflow

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The one thing most voters arriving here do not know

Georgia has two established offensive Player of the Week fan polls on High School on SI — one for North Georgia, one for South Georgia — that split the state geographically. Most fans who follow those polls assume the defensive poll works the same way. It does not. The 2025 defensive ballot is statewide and undivided from the first week: Kobe King of Coahulla Creek (Walker County, northwest Georgia) and Zay Clark of Thomasville (Thomas County, deep South Georgia) were on the same opening ballot, roughly 400 road miles apart.

That structural difference matters for campaigns. On the offensive polls, you compete against programs in your region. On the defensive poll, you compete against every nominated defender in the state. A well-organized small school in Middle Georgia is on the same list as a 6A Gwinnett County program, and the race is settled purely by Sunday-night turnout across that entire geography.

The second thing worth knowing: this poll launched in August 2025. The archive of past winners is still building — there is no historical pattern to consult for typical vote counts or winning margins. What exists is the opening ballot, 15 names, and the confirmed stat lines from that first week. Hogges's 14-tackle, 5-TFL, 2-sack line is the only complete benchmark on record — it is the ceiling, not the average, and future winning lines may clear or fall short of it as more weeks accumulate.

The opening ballot — what the 15 nominees reveal

The first Georgia High School Football Defensive Player of the Week ballot ran the week of August 18, 2025, closing August 24. Fifteen nominees were confirmed statewide — the only full stat line published belongs to Kenneth Hogges of Westside-Macon:

PlayerSchoolCounty / RegionConfirmed Stats
Kenneth HoggesWestside-Macon SeminolesBibb Co. (Central GA)14 tackles, 5 TFL, 2 sacks, 1 INT, 1 FF
Cameron JonesGrayson RamsGwinnett Co. (Metro Atlanta)Nominated
Ty'lon JenningsLowndes VikingsLowndes Co. (South GA)Nominated
Kellen MoranEast Forsyth BroncosForsyth Co. (North GA)Nominated
Quentin HandBanneker EaglesFulton Co. (Metro Atlanta)Nominated
Max BrownJefferson DragonsJackson Co. (North GA)Nominated
Kendall SwordDiscovery TitansGwinnett Co. (Metro Atlanta)Nominated
Zay ClarkThomasville BulldogsThomas Co. (South GA)Nominated
TJ ArmstrongTemple TigersCarroll Co. (West GA)Nominated
Ethan LunaPike County PiratesPike Co. (Middle GA)Nominated
Kobe KingCoahulla Creek BulldogsWalker Co. (Northwest GA)Nominated
Kaden CarterLamar County TrojansLamar Co. (Middle GA)Nominated
Will PattersonSonoraville PhoenixGordon Co. (North GA)Nominated
Caleb ThomasStockbridge TigersHenry Co. (South Metro)Nominated
Dylan TurmanRockdale County BulldogsRockdale Co. (East Metro)Nominated

Read the schools geographically: the 15 names span every corner of the state — northwest Georgia (Coahulla Creek), the Gwinnett corridor (Grayson, Discovery), metro Atlanta suburbs (Banneker, Stockbridge, Rockdale County), central Georgia (Westside-Macon), and deep South Georgia (Lowndes, Thomasville). That distribution is not accidental. The editors built a field that reflects the statewide scope of the ballot from week one.

Hogges's stat line is the clearest benchmark on record for what earns the lead position: a multi-category performance where no single number dominates. Fourteen tackles alone would be a strong game; five tackles for loss and two sacks alongside it signals control of a game's line of scrimmage; the interception and forced fumble mean he affected the scoreboard in both directions. That combination — volume, disruption, and turnovers — is what the 2025 opening ballot treated as the standard.

How this poll works, and what makes it different from the SI standard

The mechanics are straightforward: the ballot lives inside a weekly article at si.com/high-school/georgia, with the poll widget embedded in the text. Supporters can return and vote repeatedly until the Sunday 11:59 p.m. Pacific close — the same hard deadline that the statewide Texas polls share, and notably earlier than the SI regional Texas polls that close Monday.

Two things make this ballot different from other SI high school football polls in Georgia. First, it is defensive-only — a position group that rarely leads fan-vote recognition anywhere gets its own dedicated stage each week. In 2024, before this poll existed, a defender making a Georgia POTW ballot was exceptional: Corey Howard of Valdosta (13 tackles, 3 sacks) appeared on the South Georgia offensive ballot in what the editors treated as a cross-position exception. The 2025 dedicated ballot normalizes defensive recognition rather than treating it as a footnote.

Second, the closing day is Sunday — same as the statewide Texas polls, but different from the SI regional Texas polls that close Monday. That means the decisive voting window for Georgia's defensive ballot runs Saturday night through Sunday. Supporters who assume there is a Monday extension — because they have heard that about other SI regional polls — are mistaken about this one. Sunday night is the hard close.

Because the archive is one season deep, there is no confirmed pattern for what vote share wins in a 15-name field. What the structure tells you is that concentration of effort matters: on a ballot where 15 communities split the vote, a school that moves together — teammates voting through the week, a single clear message passed through the booster network — will pull ahead of schools where the link circulates but the ask is passive. Kenneth Hogges's opening-week line (14 tackles, 5 TFL, 2 sacks, 1 INT, 1 FF) established a high bar; the campaign that wins is the one that matches that effort in organizing before Sunday night. For campaigns where reach proves insufficient, vote-support options exist for weekly fan polls like this one.

How to vote in Georgia High School Football Defensive Player of the Week

  1. 1

    Navigate to the defensive ballot on si.com

    Go to si.com/high-school/georgia and look for the current week's Defensive Player of the Week article — it is published separately from the offensive POTW posts, so check that you have the defensive-specific link before you vote. Older ballot articles stay live at their original URLs, so confirm the publication date matches the current week.

  2. 2

    Read the stat lines before you pick

    Each nominee's performance is described in the article text — tackles, TFLs, sacks, interceptions, forced fumbles, and the opponent. Kenneth Hogges's opening-week line (14 tackles, 5 TFL, 2 sacks, 1 INT, 1 FF) is the clearest example of what qualifies. Those write-ups are your only source for the full field, so they are worth a minute before you commit.

  3. 3

    Cast your vote in the embedded widget

    Select your nominee inside the poll widget embedded in the article and click to submit. The poll runs with no cap, so you may return and vote again at any point before Sunday 11:59 p.m. Pacific — no account, no login, no limit on how often you revisit.

  4. 4

    Treat Sunday afternoon as your final push window

    Unlike the regional offensive polls that share SI's Sunday-night deadline, this ballot also closes Sunday at 11:59 p.m. PT — which means Sunday afternoon is your last reliable window to move people. A reminder message to team group chats while fans are home watching games converts better than a weekday ask.

Georgia High School Football Defensive 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 voting?
High School on SI flags automated voting for disqualification and removes suspicious vote patterns from the tally. The practical consequence is that a lead built on scripts or bots is not a safe lead — the organizer reviews results and can strip those totals before announcing a winner. Mobilizing real supporters is what makes a margin hold up.

Process & delivery

When does the poll close and when is the winner announced?
The poll closes Sunday at 11:59 p.m. Pacific Time each week. The winner is named at the top of the following week's defensive ballot article — typically published Monday or Tuesday — alongside the new week's nominees. Because this is a 2025 launch, the growing archive of winners lives exclusively on si.com/high-school/georgia as a series of ballot articles.
Is the defensive ballot on a different voting page from the offensive polls?
Yes. The defensive poll is a separate article and embedded widget from the North Georgia and South Georgia offensive POTW articles. Votes cast in the offensive polls do not carry to the defensive ballot, and vice versa. If your player is nominated on the defensive ballot, you must locate and share the defensive-specific article URL to generate votes in that race.

Service quality

Where do vote-support services fit for this defensive poll?
On a 15-name statewide ballot that closes Sunday night, the contest is decided by how many real supporters you reach — not by who votes from the most devices. Services such as <a href="/buy-sports-fan-poll-votes/">sports fan-poll vote support</a> exist precisely for weekly uncapped polls like this, where a Westside-Macon or a Pike County community needs to close a turnout gap against better-networked metro programs before Sunday 11:59 p.m. Pacific.

Custom orders

When did High School on SI launch a dedicated defensive poll for Georgia football?
The Georgia Defensive Player of the Week poll went live at the start of the 2025 season — the first confirmed ballot ran the week of August 18, 2025, covering opening-weekend games. Before 2025, Georgia high school football fan-vote recognition on SI was split between North Georgia and South Georgia offensive POTW polls only; defensive players had no equivalent weekly ballot of their own.
How does this defensive poll differ structurally from the North and South Georgia offensive polls?
The North Georgia and South Georgia offensive polls divide the state geographically, meaning a player from Coahulla Creek (Walker County, northwest Georgia) competes only against other northern programs. The defensive poll runs statewide from day one — Coahulla Creek's Kobe King and Thomasville's Zay Clark, programs separated by roughly 400 miles, were on the same opening-week ballot. The defensive poll also publishes results in a single weekly article rather than two regional ones.
What stats qualified Kenneth Hogges as the opening-week lead nominee?
Hogges of Westside-Macon posted 14 tackles (5 TFL), 2 sacks, 1 interception, and 1 forced fumble in the opening week of the 2025 season. That is the only full stat line confirmed from the first ballot; the other 14 nominees had school affiliations confirmed but individual stats were not indexed in the public source material. His line is the clearest on-record example of what earns a lead position on this ballot.
How many nominees typically appear on the defensive ballot?
The opening 2025 ballot listed 15 nominees — larger than the typical four-to-six-name field the offensive polls run during playoff weeks. Whether 15 is the editors' standard for the defensive ballot or reflects the volume of opening-week submissions is not confirmed; the field may narrow later in the season as the number of games shrinks.
What classifications are included — is this limited to the largest GHSA schools?
The ballot is statewide across all GHSA classifications. The opening-week field illustrated that range directly: Grayson (6A, Gwinnett County) and Lowndes (6A, Valdosta) shared the list with Pike County and Sonoraville, small-classification programs where 14 tackles in a game represents a proportionally dominant individual effort. Classification does not gate the ballot here — editorial judgment and stat lines do.
How are nominees chosen, and is there a submission process?
High School on SI's Georgia editors select nominees from Friday-night results. The offensive POTW polls list a nomination contact email; whether the same contact handles defensive nominations is not confirmed in the indexed source material. Submitting a player's full stat line — tackles, TFLs, sacks, turnovers, the opponent and score — early on Saturday gives editors the information they need before the ballot is set.
Can a defensive player be nominated on the offensive POTW ballot as well?
Rarely, but it has happened. In 2024, before the dedicated defensive poll existed, Corey Howard of Valdosta — a DE with 13 tackles and 3 sacks — appeared on the South Georgia offensive POTW ballot in a cross-position slot. With the 2025 defensive poll in place, the expectation is that standout defensive performers go to the dedicated ballot rather than the offensive one, though the editors' criteria are not formally documented.
How competitive is the vote count on a 15-name ballot?
High School on SI does not publish raw vote totals for Georgia, so a specific winning count is not on record for this poll. On a 15-name statewide ballot the vote splits more ways than a four-to-six-name field, which means a nominee whose community organizes early can pull a meaningful share without needing a dominant absolute number. The race is decided by concentration of effort, not by clearing a fixed threshold.
Where can I find past Georgia Defensive POTW results?
Each week's winner is named at the top of the following ballot article on si.com/high-school/georgia. Because the poll launched in August 2025, the archive is still accumulating — there is no aggregated results page yet. Browsing the weekly ballot articles is currently the only way to trace prior winners.
Does the defensive poll interact with any official GHSA awards?
No. High School on SI's fan poll is independent of GHSA's classification award process. Winning does not feed into GHSA all-state ballots or region MVP selections — those are decided by coaches and athletic associations, not by public vote totals. What the SI win does carry into is the following week's ballot: winners are named at the top of the next article, making the result visible statewide before the next set of nominees is posted. For a 2025-launch poll still building its archive, that weekly named-champion slot is the only cross-week record available.

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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