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MLive Kalamazoo-Area High School Football Player of the Week: How Voting Works & How to Win

MLive's weekly fan-vote poll on mlive.com recognizing standout southwest Michigan prep football performers. Editors nominate the field — as many as 44 in a single week — and fans vote via an embedded poll.fm ballot with no account required; the poll closes Thursday morning or Friday afternoon depending on the week.

Run by: MLive / Kalamazoo Gazette (Advance Local) Market: Kalamazoo, MI Cadence: weekly Vote cap: No stated per-hour cap confirmed for Kalamazoo football polls. MLive's statewide playoff poll explicitly allows multiple votes per person until deadline. Verify the current cap on the active poll page before voting.
Thematic photo for MLive Kalamazoo-Area High School Football Player of the Week showing MLive Kalamazoo-Area High School Football Player of the Week voting workflow

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What 51% and 21% both winning tells you about this poll

The two confirmed 2024 results are almost opposites — and together they describe exactly how the Kalamazoo ballot works. TJ Luteyn of Schoolcraft won Week 6 with 51%, a majority over 43 other nominees. Rocky Karsen of Lawton won Week 9 with 21% in a 34-player field where the vote split across the rest of the ballot. One winner consolidated; the other won a fragmented race. Neither needed the other's margin to claim the week.

What the numbers share is that both winners came from small Division 5 or 5-6 programs — not from Portage Central, Portage Northern, or Kalamazoo Central, the larger enrollment schools in the coverage area. That is not coincidence. Lawton and Schoolcraft are compact communities. A link to the poll reaches most of the relevant audience in one or two hops, not five. The larger metro programs have more people in absolute terms, but the smaller towns can move their community faster when the moment is clear.

The clearest strategic read from the data: a tight, coordinated school can reach majority; a well-liked player in a divided week can win with a fifth of the vote. The target number here is not fixed — it depends on how well the rest of the field mobilizes alongside you. Both confirmed 2024 winners came from Division 5 or 5-6 programs, not the larger metro schools, which tells you something real about which communities moved first.

How the ballot actually runs — platform, deadline, and field size

The poll lives inside an article on mlive.com/highschoolsports/kalamazoo/, not on a standalone voting page. MLive publishes the Player of the Week article Monday or Tuesday, and the poll.fm ballot is embedded in the body of that article. To vote, you find the article, scroll past the intro text, and click your nominee in the widget. Live percentages update as votes come in — so the standings are visible throughout the week.

 Kalamazoo POTWBay City MLive POTWMuskegon MLive POTW
Nominee count (confirmed)34–44 per week~11 per cycle~4 per cycle
Poll platformpoll.fm in articlepoll.fm in articlepoll.fm in article
Typical closeThu morning or Fri afternoonVariesThu 9 a.m. (Week 1 2024)
RegistrationNoneNoneNone
Cap statedNone confirmed for footballNot confirmedNot confirmed

The deadline is the critical variable. It is not the same day every week — confirmed Kalamazoo polls have closed on Thursday mornings and Friday afternoons in different seasons, and the article always states the exact time. A campaign that sends its final push on the wrong day loses votes it had already earned. Read the close time the same hour you find the article. Unlike the SI Texas regional polls, which run to a consistent Monday 11:59 p.m. Pacific, this ballot gives you no fixed anchor — the deadline is the first thing to pin down.

The 34-to-44 nominee range is the other number worth absorbing. With 44 players on the ballot, a winner at 51% drew more votes than the remaining 43 nominees combined. That concentration is rare in polls this large — it points to one school making a deliberate, coordinated push while the rest of the field spread across normal organic traffic.

Schoolcraft, Lawton, and what small-town southwest Michigan programs actually do here

The Kalamazoo coverage area runs from the Portage schools near the city center out to small rural programs in Cass, St. Joseph, and Van Buren counties. On a given week the ballot can include Portage Central — a Division 1-2 program drawing from a large suburban district — and Schoolcraft, a Division 5 school with a fraction of that enrollment. They are on the same list, competing for the same votes.

The 2024 data shows which type of school has actually won. Schoolcraft's Luteyn took Week 6 at 51%. Lawton's Karsen took Week 9 at 21%. Both schools sit in the Division 5 to 5-6 tier. Lawton also placed Chase Triemstra (6%) and Brady Quick (5%) on the Week 6 ballot in the same season — three separate players from one small program in a region-wide field. That kind of ballot presence across multiple cycles reflects a school with steady on-field production and a community that pays close enough attention to see it get nominated.

Mattawan provides a contrasting example. Troy Scarff appeared in both confirmed 2024 cycles — 7% in Week 6, runner-up at 16% in Week 9 — without winning either. Mattawan is a Division 2-3 program with a larger fan base in absolute terms. Scarff's repeat nominations show he was one of the region's best performers that season; the margins show that a wider fan base, spread across a larger geography, does not automatically produce a concentrated vote.

Portage Central and Portage Northern sit in Division 1-2, the top of the enrollment ladder for this coverage area. Neither has a confirmed POTW win in the 2024 data. The Kalamazoo ballot is one of the few Michigan polls where that fact is worth stating out loud — it is not that the big programs are absent from the field; it is that the confirmed winners are not coming from them. When the vote is fragmented across 34 names, 21% wins. When one community organizes while the others do not, 51% wins. Either way, the structural advantage belongs to the school that closes the gap between "nominated" and "everyone we know has voted." Campaigns that need to extend that reach quickly sometimes use vote support services built for open, uncapped fan polls of this format.

How to vote in MLive Kalamazoo-Area High School Football Player of the Week

  1. 1

    Find the current week's article on mlive.com

    Go to mlive.com/highschoolsports/kalamazoo/ and look for the most recent Football Player of the Week post — published Monday or Tuesday of that game week. The poll.fm ballot is embedded inside the article body, not on a separate page, so you need the right week's article before anything else. The headline will include "vote for" or "player of the week."

  2. 2

    Scroll past the lede to find the embedded poll.fm widget

    The ballot appears partway down the article, below the intro text and nominee write-ups. It lists every nominated player with their school. Read the field before you vote — with 34 to 44 nominees per confirmed week, the full list is longer than it looks in the preview, and knowing who is on the ballot is worth the scroll.

  3. 3

    Click your nominee and watch the live tally update

    Select your player in the poll.fm widget. The vote registers immediately and the running percentages for all nominees update in real time, so you can track where your candidate sits in the field from the moment you vote.

  4. 4

    Note the exact close time in the article, then plan accordingly

    The deadline is not fixed: confirmed Kalamazoo polls have closed on Thursday mornings and Friday afternoons in different weeks. The article always states the closing time. A campaign that does not know the exact close risks pushing votes after the ballot has locked — confirm the deadline the same day you find the article.

MLive Kalamazoo-Area High School Football Player of the Week — frequently asked questions

14 answers covering legality, delivery, quality, pricing and platform specifics.

Legality & scope

What does MLive prohibit in these polls?
MLive prohibits automated voting — scripts and bots run against the rules of the ballot. Votes cast through automation are subject to removal by the organizer. The poll is built for manual fan participation; the published guidance for MLive's playoff polls specifically allows people to vote multiple times, which is the sanctioned form of repeat voting on the platform.

Process & delivery

Does the poll close on the same day every week?
No. The deadline varies. MLive's Muskegon football poll closes at 9 a.m. Thursday; Grand Rapids hub polls typically close Friday afternoon. Kalamazoo polls have been confirmed closing across both ranges. The current week's article states the exact close time — that line is the only reliable source for any given week.
Can I vote more than once in the Kalamazoo football poll?
MLive's statewide Michigan football playoff poll explicitly allows multiple votes per person until the deadline — that is the closest published guidance on MLive's voting rules. No separate per-hour cap has been stated for the Kalamazoo football polls. Check the active ballot page for any rules posted there, because the terms can differ between poll editions.
Does the poll run through the MHSAA playoffs?
Regular-season cycles have been confirmed through at least Week 9. A separate playoff-specific MLive Kalamazoo football poll has also been confirmed (poll.fm/12925426), so the ballot does not necessarily stop at the end of the regular season. During the final MHSAA rounds in November, MLive may run a statewide ballot alongside or in place of the regional one.

Service quality

What does winning the Kalamazoo poll actually get a player?
The winner is named in a dedicated article on mlive.com and promoted across MLive's Michigan social channels. MLive reaches Michigan readership in the millions of monthly unique visitors, so the coverage extends well beyond the local school district. Coaches in southwest Michigan and at statewide programs follow MLive as a regional intelligence source. It is not a formal scouting credential, but a named mlive.com feature is a more durable record than a single social media post.
Is there an external vote-support option for a poll this large?
Because the Kalamazoo ballot is open, uncapped, and decided entirely by turnout before a Thursday-morning or Friday-afternoon close, <a href="/buy-sports-fan-poll-votes/">sports fan-poll vote support</a> services are built for exactly this format — a large, fragmented field where the winner in Week 9 needed only 21% and the winner in Week 6 needed 51%.

Custom orders

What was the winning vote share in the two most recently confirmed Kalamazoo polls?
TJ Luteyn of Schoolcraft won Week 6 of the 2024 season with 51% of the vote — a majority in a 44-nominee field. Rocky Karsen of Lawton won Week 9 of the same season with 21% in a 34-nominee field. The gap between those two numbers is the whole story: when one school concentrates its vote, the winner clears half the field; when the vote fragments, 21% is enough.
Why does Lawton keep showing up in confirmed Kalamazoo poll results?
Three separate Lawton players appeared in the two confirmed 2024 cycles: Chase Triemstra (6%, Week 6), Brady Quick (5%, Week 6), and Rocky Karsen (21%, Week 9 — winner). A small Division 5-6 program cycling three players onto the same region-wide ballot across a single season points to a school with consistent on-field production and enough community attention to convert performances into nominations. Karsen won with a plurality, not a majority — the Week 9 field was fragmented — which means Lawton did not need to consolidate the whole region to take the week.
How many nominees are on the Kalamazoo ballot in a typical week?
Confirmed 2024 polls ran 34 nominees in Week 9 and 44 in Week 6. That field size is notable: Bay City MLive football polls have run 11 nominees per confirmed cycle, and the Muskegon ballot has been confirmed at 4 nominees. Kalamazoo is the largest regional football POTW ballot in Michigan by nominee count in any confirmed data.
Who selects the nominees each week?
MLive's Kalamazoo-area sports reporters and editorial staff build the field from that weekend's game results. Nominations are not submitted through a public online form — they go through the Kalamazoo Gazette / MLive newsroom. A player whose performance goes unflagged can be missed, so reaching out to the reporting team by Sunday is the most direct path to getting a strong game considered.
Do small Division 5-6 schools actually compete with Division 1-2 programs on the same ballot?
The 2024 results settle this. Schoolcraft (Division 5) won Week 6 with 51% of a 44-player field that included Division 1-2 programs such as Portage Central and Portage Northern. Lawton (Division 5-6) won Week 9. The ballot does not separate schools by enrollment tier — every nominated player from the coverage area is on the same list, and turnout, not enrollment, determines the outcome.
What is the difference between the Kalamazoo poll and other Michigan MLive football polls?
The Kalamazoo ballot is football-specific and covers southwest Michigan; the Grand Rapids MLive Athlete of the Week poll covers all sports across the West Michigan metro. The Bay City and Muskegon football polls run smaller confirmed fields — 11 and 4 nominees respectively. Kalamazoo's 34-to-44-nominee range makes it the most crowded regional football ballot in confirmed Michigan data.
What happened when Troy Scarff appeared in both confirmed 2024 polls?
Troy Scarff of Mattawan was nominated in Week 6 (finishing with 7% in the 44-player field behind Luteyn's 51%) and again in Week 9 (finishing runner-up with 16% behind Karsen's 21%). A player repeating across multiple confirmed cycles in the same season shows that strong performers cycle back through the ballot regularly — and that a second nomination does not carry the first week's vote momentum into the new poll.
How long has MLive run this poll and how consistent is the format?
MLive has covered Kalamazoo-area prep sports through the Kalamazoo Gazette brand under Advance Local since the 2010s. Confirmed poll cycles in 2024 span Week 2 through Week 9 of the regular season plus at least one playoff-specific ballot, showing a stable multi-year format that runs through the full competitive calendar.

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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