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

The SBLive / High School on SI statewide fan vote for the best Kentucky prep football performance each week. Editors nominate 8–10 standouts, anyone can vote with no account, and the ballot closes Sunday at 11:59 p.m. — a full day earlier than the SI regional polls that run in Texas.

Run by: SBLive Sports / High School on SI Cadence: weekly Vote cap: Unlimited — no per-period cap; automated voting explicitly prohibited
Thematic photo for Kentucky High School Football Player of the Week showing Kentucky High School Football Player of the Week voting workflow

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The thing most Kentucky voters arrive not knowing

The Kentucky High School Football Player of the Week ballot closes Sunday night — not Monday. That single fact is worth knowing before anything else, because a supporter who assumes the poll runs until Monday loses an entire day of voting. SI's regional polls in Texas close Monday at 11:59 p.m. Pacific; this one does not. Saturday night through Sunday afternoon is when the Kentucky race is decided.

The second thing is that the ballot draws from across all six KHSAA classes without weighting them. Cameron Bulle of Glasgow — not a Louisville powerhouse — won the opening confirmed week of 2024 on 135 rushing yards and three touchdowns. Boyle County's Demauriah Brown and Franklin County's Easton Powell were named co-winners for the week of October 14–19. None of those programs are in the 6A Louisville bracket that tends to dominate casual football conversation in Kentucky. The ballot is statewide in fact, not just name.

What three 2024 ballots reveal about the nominee field

Three confirmed 2024 ballot weeks are on record. Taken together they sketch what a typical Kentucky POTW field looks like.

WeekNomineesSchools represented
Aug 22–2410Hart Co., Fort Knox, Graves Co., Tates Creek, Highlands, Breckinridge Co., Murray, Owensboro Catholic, Simon Kenton
Sep 6–88Bowling Green, Owensboro Catholic, Graves Co., Male, Center Grove, South Warren, Lloyd Memorial, Cooper
Oct 28–3010Boyle Co., Cooper, Franklin Co., Ryle, Highlands, South Warren, Owensboro Catholic, Bowling Green, Central-Louisville, Graves Co.

A few patterns stand out. Owensboro Catholic's Brady Atwell appeared on all three ballots — three separate weeks of the same season. The program produced standout performances consistently enough that the SBLive editors nominated the same player in August, September, and October. Graves County also appeared in all three confirmed weeks. And the field size fluctuated: 10, then 8, then 10 again — the nominee count is not fixed, which means any given week your candidate may be one of eight or one of ten.

The October 31 ballot fell during the run-up to the playoffs, and it shows how varied the competitive tier gets: a linebacker from Boyle County (4A dynasty), a quarterback from Highlands (Northern Kentucky staple), and a receiver from Graves County (western Kentucky) all on the same list alongside Louisville's Central High School.

Louisville metro versus the rest: how the community networks differ

Kentucky's football map is split in a way that shapes fan-poll campaigns more than program win-loss records do.

Louisville's 6A programs — Trinity, St. Xavier, Male — sit at one end. Trinity is the most decorated program in Kentucky football history, with roughly 30 state titles and three consecutive 6A championships through 2025. The school's annual game against St. Xavier draws 35,000-plus fans to Cardinal Stadium. When a Trinity or Male player appears on the weekly ballot, the Louisville metro's alumni network is among the largest absolute fan pools in the state. The trade-off, familiar in any large urban program, is that wide networks are slower to consolidate around a single link.

Northern Kentucky runs on a different axis. Covington Catholic and Highlands draw from communities that extend across the Ohio border into the Cincinnati metro. An alumni base that commutes north to Cincinnati or Dayton can still vote from Ohio — the ballot has no geographic restriction. A Covington Catholic campaign can activate former players now living in Hamilton County the same way it reaches families in Park Hills.

The smaller-class and regional programs — Boyle County in Danville, Graves County in Mayfield, Glasgow in Barren County — are the most centralized. In a town where the high school football program is the weekly social event, a single group text thread reaches most of the voting-age population. Cameron Bulle winning from Glasgow in the season opener is that dynamic made concrete: a smaller community turning out in full can out-pace a larger one that turns out at a fraction.

Running a real campaign before Sunday night

The Kentucky ballot opens Monday or Tuesday each week after SBLive reviews the weekend's stat lines, and closes Sunday at 11:59 p.m. That is five or six days — but the practical window is shorter. Most casual traffic hits a ballot in the first two days; the tail end of the week belongs to whoever keeps pushing.

Getting your player onto the ballot starts before the poll is built. SBLive's editors compile nominees from game results, so submitting a complete performance record — yards, scores, opponent, final score, player position — as early as Saturday night gives the Kentucky team what it needs before Sunday morning nominations are set. A game that nobody flags can be missed even when the numbers deserved inclusion.

Once the ballot is live, the work is reach. Because the poll is uncapped and settles entirely on turnout by Sunday night, the most effective campaigns are the ones that widen the circle rather than cycling through the same few phones. Players texting their own networks, booster accounts posting mid-week and again Sunday morning, alumni groups in Louisville, Cincinnati, or Lexington getting one nudge before the evening close — that is the actual campaign structure the confirmed 2024 results suggest. For programs that want to supplement organic reach before the Sunday deadline, structured vote-support campaigns exist for this type of open weekly poll.

The multi-sport Kentucky Athlete of the Week runs year-round across all KHSAA sports on a parallel ballot. More Kentucky contests are indexed at /usa/kentucky/, and the full national directory is at /usa/.

How to vote in Kentucky High School Football Player of the Week

  1. 1

    Find the current week's article on si.com

    The poll is embedded inside a dated article at si.com/high-school/kentucky, not on a permanent standalone page. After each weekend's games, search for the newest Kentucky football Player of the Week post — older weeks' ballots remain accessible but are already closed, so confirming you have the current article before voting matters.

  2. 2

    Read the stat lines listed for each nominee

    SBLive includes the performance that earned each nomination: rushing totals, passing lines, defensive stat lines, the opponent. The Kentucky ballot typically runs 8–10 names from across all six KHSAA classes and regions, so the write-ups are the only place to see the full field before choosing.

  3. 3

    Cast your vote — the poll is uncapped

    Select your player in the embedded widget. No account or registration is required. The ballot carries no per-session or per-period limit — a supporter can return multiple times before Sunday's close. That close arrives a full day sooner than the SI regional polls in states like Texas, so Sunday is the hard stop.

  4. 4

    Sunday is the real deadline — not Monday

    Unlike SI's Dallas/North Texas or Houston regional ballots, which close Monday night, the Kentucky poll closes Sunday. The decisive window is Saturday night through Sunday afternoon. A campaign that assumes it has until Monday loses that final day entirely.

Kentucky 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 voting or bots?
The September 10, 2024 ballot article explicitly stated automated voting is prohibited. The organizer runs these polls for fan engagement; results built on bot traffic are subject to removal. A vote total that holds up is one that comes from real supporters sharing the link and returning to vote, not from a single machine submitting in a loop.

Process & delivery

Brady Atwell of Owensboro Catholic appeared on the ballot in August, September, and October 2024 — is a player eligible every week?
Yes. There is no confirmed rule preventing repeat nominations. Atwell appeared as a nominee on the August 26 ballot, the September 10 ballot, and the October 31 ballot across the 2024 season — each week as a different active player on a different opponent. A player whose school keeps producing standout performances can be nominated as often as the editorial staff judges it warranted.
When exactly does voting close, and how does that compare to SI's Texas polls?
The Kentucky ballot closes Sunday at 11:59 p.m. SI's four Texas regional polls — Dallas/North Texas, Houston/Southeast Texas, San Antonio, and East Texas — close Monday at 11:59 p.m. Pacific. The Kentucky window is a full day shorter. A Kentucky campaign that is still activating supporters on Monday morning has already missed the close.
How are nominees chosen, and can I submit a player for consideration?
SBLive's Kentucky editorial team selects nominees based on game results from the previous week. The organizer's contact for Kentucky coverage is through si.com/high-school/kentucky and the SBLive Sports network; submitting a full stat line (yards, scores, opponent, final score) to the Kentucky editor by Saturday or Sunday gives the team what it needs before that week's ballot is set.

Service quality

Where do vote-support services fit in for a statewide poll with no cap?
Because the ballot is open statewide, requires no account, and is decided entirely by turnout before Sunday night, every vote a campaign can generate before the close counts equally. Services such as <a href="/buy-sports-fan-poll-votes/">sports fan-poll vote support</a> exist for exactly this kind of recurring weekly poll where reach before the deadline is the only variable.

Platform specifics

How many players are typically nominated each week?
Confirmed ballots from 2024 contained either 8 or 10 nominees. The August 26 and October 31 polls each listed 10; the September 10 poll listed 8. The field size appears to vary week-to-week at SBLive's editorial discretion rather than being fixed.
Does the ballot include players from private schools alongside KHSAA public programs?
Yes. The October 31, 2024 ballot included Brady Atwell of Owensboro Catholic, a private school that uses the KHSAA multiplier system but competes in the same classification structure as public programs. Private schools in Kentucky are not on a separate ballot; they appear alongside public programs in any given week.

Targeting & customisation

Does Trinity — Kentucky's most decorated 6A program — dominate these ballots?
Trinity's dynasty (three consecutive 6A titles through 2025, roughly 30 state championships all-time) generates serious Louisville-metro fan volume when a Rocks player is nominated. But the 2024 confirmed ballots show the winner can just as easily come from Glasgow (smaller class) or Boyle County (4A Danville). A school's championship pedigree raises the ceiling on mobilized support; it does not guarantee a weekly poll result.
Can out-of-state supporters or alumni vote from another state?
No geographic restriction is posted; the ballot at si.com is open to anyone with internet access. Alumni of Kentucky programs who have moved out of state are as eligible to vote as someone in Louisville or Lexington. That matters for programs with large diaspora bases — Covington Catholic in Northern Kentucky, for instance, draws alumni across the Cincinnati metro that extends into Ohio.

Custom orders

Who was the first confirmed winner of the 2024 Kentucky football season?
Cameron Bulle of Glasgow, announced in the September 10, 2024 ballot article. He carried for 135 yards and scored three touchdowns the week of August 22–24. Glasgow competes as a smaller-classification program; Bulle's win confirms the ballot draws from across KHSAA's full six-class range, not just the Louisville 6A programs most visible to casual fans.
Can two players share the Player of the Week title in the same week?
Yes — it happened on the week of October 14–19, 2024, when SBLive named co-winners: Demauriah Brown of Boyle County and Easton Powell of Franklin County. The co-winner outcome is not announced in advance as an option; SBLive can exercise editorial discretion if the ballot produces an exceptionally close result or if two performances are judged to merit equal recognition.
How is the Kentucky football POTW different from the Kentucky Athlete of the Week?
The Kentucky High School Athlete of the Week covers all KHSAA sports across fall, winter, and spring seasons; the football Player of the Week runs only during football season (mid-August through November) and is football-specific. Both are SBLive / SI polls at si.com, but they use distinct article URLs and ballot fields. A football fan searching for their quarterback's poll will not find it on the multi-sport AOTW ballot.
Is this the same as the Kentucky Football Player of the Year?
No. The Player of the Year is a separate annual fan vote that ran December–January for the 2024 season, covering the full year's standouts in a single long ballot. The weekly POTW runs throughout the fall season only and recognizes single-game or single-week performances, not cumulative season-long production.
How do I find past Kentucky Player of the Week winners?
Each week's winner is announced in a follow-up article on si.com/high-school/kentucky, and the ballot articles that embed each poll typically name the prior week's winner at the top. There is no aggregated leaderboard or archive page; browsing the article history is the only public record of confirmed results.

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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