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New Jersey High School Boys Basketball Player of the Week: How Voting Works & How to Win

The High School on SI statewide fan vote for New Jersey's best boys basketball performance of the week. SI editors nominate eight players from across all NJSIAA sections; anyone can vote with no account, and the ballot closes Sunday at 11:59 p.m. Pacific — one day earlier than the statewide football polls.

Run by: High School on SI / SBLive Sports Cadence: weekly Vote cap: Unlimited — no per-period cap posted; automated votes disqualified
Thematic photo for New Jersey High School Boys Basketball Player of the Week showing New Jersey High School Boys Basketball Player of the Week voting workflow

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.

The thing this poll does not tell you — and why it matters

SI does not publish raw vote totals for the New Jersey boys basketball Player of the Week. You get the winner's name; you don't get the margin, the runner-up's percentage, or any number that tells you how tight the race actually was. That absence shapes everything about how to run a campaign here.

For comparison: the Dallas / North Texas football poll produced a documented 54.77% — one school clearly consolidated while the others split. For New Jersey basketball, there is no equivalent public record. The practical consequence is that you cannot benchmark what "winning" looks like in vote terms. You are running against an unknown number, with eight nominees, over about four days.

Eight nominees is wider than most SI regional polls. On the January 20, 2025 ballot, the field covered eight different schools from Bergen, Hudson, Monmouth, Middlesex, Somerset, and Union counties, plus two non-public programs. No section had two nominees. That distribution matters because it means no single school's fan base is dominant by default — every week, eight communities are splitting the vote, and the one that turns out hardest wins. Simple math, but the implication is real: a small school with a tight network can win any week it shows up.

The January 20, 2025 ballot: eight schools, six counties

The confirmed ballot for the week of January 20, 2025 is the clearest factual record available for this poll. Eight nominees:

NomineeSchoolCounty
William BrunsonRutgers PrepSomerset (Non-Public)
Angel CastellanoHarrison HSHudson
Johnny ChanameLyndhurst HSBergen
Micah GordonPlainfield HSUnion
Xzavier HolleyAcademy Charter SchoolNon-Public
Sam JonesSayreville HSMiddlesex
Malik MyattLife Center AcademyNon-Public
JoJo NewellHenry Hudson RegionalMonmouth

Read the geography. Bergen, Hudson, Monmouth, Middlesex, Union, Somerset — these are six counties spread across North, Central, and Shore regions of the state. And two of the eight nominees are from non-public programs: Rutgers Prep (Franklin Township) and Life Center Academy (Burlington County), which play under Non-Public classifications, not the standard NJSIAA sectional structure their public counterparts compete in.

Henry Hudson Regional is the name worth noting. Fewer than 300 students in Highlands, at the tip of the Shore Conference. JoJo Newell was on the same ballot as Plainfield's Micah Gordon — Plainfield enrolls over 2,000. The size gap is irrelevant on this ballot. Always has been.

What Sunday's deadline means in practice

The basketball poll closes Sunday at 11:59 p.m. Pacific — 2:59 a.m. Monday Eastern. The football poll in New Jersey runs the same deadline, but basketball starts being covered in December, so the two never compete for attention at the same time.

Sunday close means the decisive window is shorter than it looks. A ballot that goes live Thursday or Friday has three or four days running, but most voters who are going to vote passively do so in the first 24 hours. By Saturday the casual turnout has peaked. The supporters who keep going Sunday — the team group chat that sends one more reminder after the afternoon game, the booster page that posts before halftime of whatever game is on TV — are voting into a poll where a lot of the competition has already stopped pushing.

Bergen County (Lyndhurst) and Hudson County (Harrison) schools draw on some of the densest alumni networks in North Jersey — first- and second-generation Italian and Latino communities where basketball has real identity weight. Plainfield and Sayreville pull from Union and Middlesex County, which carry large South Asian and Latino populations with strong social network density. Henry Hudson Regional has the smallest absolute fan base but the most geographically concentrated one. None of that community topology changes week to week. A campaign that understands which network type it has — wide and slow, small and fast — plans its Sunday push accordingly.

Because this ballot is open, statewide, and decided entirely by how many supporters show up before Sunday night, structured campaigns exist for polls of this type. The weekly fan-vote how-to guide covers the recurring cadence; for more context on vote support campaigns broadly, that page walks through how they work. Other active New Jersey polls are at the state directory, and the full national index lives at /usa/.

How to vote in New Jersey High School Boys Basketball Player of the Week

  1. 1

    Find the current week's SI article

    The ballot lives inside a dated article on si.com/high-school/new-jersey, not on a permanent page. Search for the most recent "New Jersey boys basketball Player of the Week" post and confirm the date — older polls stay accessible online, so landing on a closed week's article is easy to do by accident.

  2. 2

    Read the nominee list before picking

    SI lists each player with the performance that earned the nomination: point totals, opponent, team record context. Eight nominees means the field is broader than most state basketball polls; it is worth a look before committing to a vote, especially if you recognize a player but not the others on the ballot.

  3. 3

    Cast your vote — and return through the week

    Tap or click your nominee in the embedded widget. No account or login is needed, and the ballot does not post a per-period limit, so the same supporter can return and vote again before Sunday's close.

  4. 4

    Sunday night is the real deadline

    The ballot closes Sunday at 11:59 p.m. Pacific — for New Jersey that is 2:59 a.m. Monday Eastern. Most casual supporters stop tracking the poll Friday or Saturday; the hours Sunday afternoon into evening are when concentrated campaigns pull clear of dispersed ones.

New Jersey High School Boys Basketball 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?
SI's polling platform is built for manual fan participation; automated votes are disqualified. A campaign that reaches more real supporters before Sunday night holds up; one built on a single device cycling through automated scripts does not.

Process & delivery

Is there a vote cap on the New Jersey basketball poll?
No per-period limit is posted on SI's New Jersey basketball ballot. That differs from the Shore Sports Insider basketball poll, which explicitly caps voters at once per hour. On the SI ballot the only hard boundary is Sunday's 11:59 p.m. Pacific close.
When does the basketball season run, and how many polls happen per year?
New Jersey high school basketball runs roughly December through March (NJSIAA regular season plus sectional and state tournaments). That is approximately fourteen to seventeen weekly ballots per season, depending on when SI begins covering the sport and how tournament weeks are handled.
Who nominates players, and can I submit a candidate?
SI's New Jersey editorial staff build the weekly ballot from game results and statistics. The NJ football POTW contact on file is Bob Lundeberg (bob.lundeberg@gmail.com); the basketball nomination channel is not separately confirmed, but reaching SI's New Jersey desk with a full stat line — player, school, opponent, game date, points and position — is the documented path for football and likely applies here as well.
What happens if two players from the same school are nominated?
SI's practice on these weekly polls is to nominate one player per school per week. The January 2025 ballot had eight distinct schools, no duplicates. If a school produces two outstanding performances in the same week, the editors select one for the ballot.

Service quality

Where does outside vote support fit in for a poll like this?
Because the ballot is statewide, uncapped, and settled entirely by turnout before Sunday night, the contest is really just how many supporters you reach in time. Services like <a href="/buy-sports-fan-poll-votes/">sports fan-poll vote support</a> exist for exactly this type of open weekly poll.

Pricing & payment

Is there a prize for winning the New Jersey basketball Player of the Week?
The recognition is editorial: the winning player is featured in a write-up on si.com/high-school/new-jersey. No physical trophy or cash prize is confirmed for this poll. The Shore Sports Insider basketball poll, by contrast, does award a gift card to Broad Street Dough Co.; that is a separate contest.

Platform specifics

Does SI publish the vote totals after the New Jersey basketball poll closes?
No. SI announces the winner but does not release raw vote counts or percentages for this poll. That is a meaningful difference from, say, the football polls, where winning percentages have been documented publicly. For basketball, the record is the name, not the margin.
How does this statewide SI poll differ from the Shore Sports Insider boys basketball poll?
Two meaningful differences. The SI poll is statewide (all NJSIAA sections) and closes Sunday; the Shore Sports Insider poll covers only the Shore Conference (Monmouth and Ocean counties), closes Saturday at 10:00 a.m., and has an explicit once-per-hour cap. A player from Red Bank Catholic or Manasquan can appear on both in the same week — they are separate ballots with separate outcomes.
Does the New Jersey basketball poll close on the same day as the football poll?
The NJ football poll closes Sunday 11:59 p.m. Pacific too, so they share a deadline day. The difference is the season window: football runs September through November; basketball runs December through March. They do not overlap on the calendar.

Custom orders

How many nominees appear on the New Jersey boys basketball ballot each week?
Eight. The January 20, 2025 ballot had exactly eight players: William Brunson (Rutgers Prep), Angel Castellano (Harrison), Johnny Chaname (Lyndhurst), Micah Gordon (Plainfield), Xzavier Holley (Academy Charter), Sam Jones (Sayreville), Malik Myatt (Life Center Academy), and JoJo Newell (Henry Hudson Regional). That is a wider field than the SI football polls, which typically carry six nominees per week.
Which NJSIAA sections are represented on the ballot?
The January 2025 ballot drew from across the state — Rutgers Prep (Somerset County, Central NJ), Harrison (Hudson County, North Jersey Section II), Lyndhurst (Bergen County, Section I), Plainfield (Union County, Section II), Sayreville (Middlesex County, Central), and Henry Hudson Regional (Monmouth County, Shore Conference). Life Center Academy and Academy Charter are non-public programs. No single section dominates the field; SI pulls nominations statewide.
Can a player from a non-public school like Don Bosco Prep or Bergen Catholic appear on the ballot?
Yes. Life Center Academy and Academy Charter School were both on the January 2025 ballot — non-public programs competing for votes alongside public school nominees. NJSIAA Non-Public A and Non-Public B programs are eligible, and SI does not filter by school classification.
Henry Hudson Regional appears on the ballot — how large is that school?
Henry Hudson Regional in Highlands (Monmouth County) enrolls under 300 students, making it one of the smallest programs in the Shore Conference. JoJo Newell's appearance on the January 2025 statewide ballot alongside nominees from Rutgers Prep and Plainfield — both much larger programs — is a concrete example of how enrollment does not gate this poll. The ballot is open statewide and the fan vote decides it.

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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