Skip to main content

Western New York High School Football Player of the Week: How Voting Works & How to Win

The Buffalo News Prep Talk Boys Athlete of the Week is a public fan vote at buffalonews.com, sponsored by Sgroi Financial. During fall, football nominees share the ballot with soccer and cross-country athletes. Anyone can vote with no account; the poll closes at noon Thursday — a Thursday cutoff you will not find on any other weekly regional football poll in New York.

Run by: Buffalo News / Prep Talk Market: Buffalo, NY Cadence: weekly Vote cap: Unlimited — no per-period cap stated
Thematic photo for Western New York High School Football Player of the Week showing Western New York High School Football 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.

What Thursday noon tells you before you vote

The detail most supporters miss is the deadline. The Buffalo News Prep Talk Boys Athlete of the Week closes at noon Thursday Eastern time — not Sunday night, not Friday, not after the week's games. That cutoff is specific to how a newspaper-driven poll works: the article goes up Monday or Tuesday, runs through mid-week, and the editors use Thursday afternoon to write the winner announcement before the next Prep Talk cycle begins.

For a supporter used to SI's statewide New York poll — which runs to Sunday 11:59 p.m. Pacific and gives campaigns a full week — this deadline is a hard reorientation. The practical voting window for the Prep Talk is Monday through Wednesday. A campaign that posts the ballot link on Thursday morning is telling people to vote three hours before the widget goes dark. That is not a campaign; it is a notification that someone already lost.

There is one other thing the Thursday noon close makes clear: this poll rewards preparation, not size. The programs with the largest alumni bases in WNY — Lancaster in Class AA, Jamestown Red Raiders, the Monsignor Martin powers — have an absolute edge in reach, but only if they activate it early. A smaller Section VI program whose coaching staff pushes the link Monday evening and reminds on Wednesday can finish ahead of a larger school that assumes its name carries the vote on its own.

The ballot structure — and what it means to share the field with other sports

In fall, the Prep Talk Boys Athlete of the Week does not separate football from soccer and cross-country. The same weekly ballot lists nominees from all three sports together, and voters choose from the combined field. That is not a quirk to work around — it is the defining competitive fact of this poll.

On the September 23, 2023 ballot, Joe Carlson of Starpoint and Gavin Susfolk of Akron both appeared as football nominees. Carlson threw and ran for five touchdowns in a 41-15 win over West Seneca East; Susfolk recorded five sacks as a sophomore in a 47-0 shutout of Cleveland Hill — a school record. Those are outstanding football performances. On a football-only ballot, both might be frontrunners. On a multi-sport ballot they were two football nominees among a field that also included soccer and cross-country athletes, all competing for votes from the same WNY readership.

The structural consequence is that a football campaign here cannot only reach football families. The soccer parents voting for the soccer nominee are pulling from the same pool. A football program that mobilizes its entire school community — not just the football booster group, but the broader student section, the band, the school social accounts — draws from a wider base than one that limits outreach to athletic families. That is the concrete advantage of treating this as a school contest rather than a sport contest.

Section VI and Monsignor Martin on the same ballot

Western New York high school football runs through two governing bodies that rarely appear on the same list. Section VI of the NYSPHSAA covers public schools across Erie, Niagara, Chautauqua, and Cattaraugus counties — five enrollment classes from AA down to D, with sectional championships held at Highmark Stadium. Lancaster won the 2024 Class AA title over Jamestown 28-21 at Highmark; Orchard Park reached the Class AA semifinals that same fall. Below Class AA, smaller programs from Chautauqua and Cattaraugus counties make the sectional bracket without the name recognition of the metro schools.

The Monsignor Martin Athletic Association runs separately — Canisius, St. Francis, St. Joe's, Cardinal O'Hara, and Bishop Timon-St. Jude compete in their own league outside NYSPHSAA, play for Monsignor Martin titles, and operate on a schedule that overlaps but does not intersect with the Section VI playoff bracket. St. Francis's Trent Buttles won the 2025 Dick Gallagher Buffalo News Player of the Year — the annual editorial honor; Canisius held the Monsignor Martin championship in 2023.

For the Prep Talk fan vote, those league boundaries disappear. A St. Francis nominee and a Lancaster nominee land on the same ballot, voted on by the same Buffalo-area readership. A Canisius supporter casting a vote and a Jamestown fan casting a vote are equal participants in the same poll. The Monsignor Martin programs draw heavily from Catholic school families and parish networks across the metro — a specific kind of community mobilization that differs from a public school's alumni reach and is, in practice, often faster to concentrate when it activates.

Anthony Robinson of Starpoint — a Section VI program in Niagara County, outside the metro core — is confirmed as a Prep Talk Athlete of the Week winner. Starpoint's win illustrates the same dynamic: a program without the name recognition of the Monsignor Martin powers or Class AA public schools mobilized enough of its community before Thursday noon to take the poll. The vote-support options used for this kind of uncapped regional poll are structured around exactly that window — reaching more real supporters inside a defined deadline, which here is tighter than anywhere else in New York.

For the WNY sports landscape and regional contest context, see /usa/buffalo-new-york/ and the statewide directory at /usa/.

How to vote in Western New York High School Football Player of the Week

  1. 1

    Find the current week's Prep Talk article

    The poll does not live on a permanent page — each week's ballot is embedded inside a dated article published Monday or Tuesday on buffalonews.com/sports/high-school/. Search "Prep Talk Boys Athlete of the Week" and filter by date; clicking an older article opens a closed ballot that will not count.

  2. 2

    Identify the football nominees on a shared ballot

    During the fall season the ballot lists athletes from multiple sports — football, soccer, and cross-country nominees appear together. Read each name and the sport noted alongside it; football nominees are labeled by their game performance. You are selecting from a combined list, not a football-only field.

  3. 3

    Click your nominee and vote again before Thursday noon

    Tap the nominee in the embedded widget. No account is created and no confirmation email arrives. The same browser can return and vote again; the only hard stop is noon Thursday Eastern time. Once that cutoff passes the widget closes and the totals are final.

  4. 4

    Submit a nomination to sports@buffnews.com by Sunday

    If your player was not on this week's ballot, nominations reach the editors at sports@buffnews.com. Send by Sunday night with the full stat line — yards, touchdowns, opponent, and final score. Submissions that arrive after Monday risk missing the editorial deadline before the next article goes up.

Western New York 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 prohibit in terms of automated voting?
The Buffalo News Prep Talk poll is built for manual reader participation. Automated scripts and vote bots work against the poll's fan-vote purpose and can result in votes being discarded. Campaigns that hold up are those built on reaching more real people — teachers, teammates, alumni, booster groups — before Thursday noon, not on cycling one device.

Process & delivery

Why does this poll close Thursday at noon when most regional football polls close Sunday?
The Buffalo News Prep Talk poll runs on a newspaper production schedule, not a broadcast one. The article typically posts Monday or Tuesday after the weekend games; the Thursday noon Eastern cutoff gives the editorial staff time to announce winners in the week's print and digital Prep Talk coverage. By contrast, the statewide SI New York High School Football Player of the Week poll closes Sunday at 11:59 p.m. Pacific — a full three-plus days later. For WNY football supporters, that Thursday noon cutoff means Wednesday evening is effectively the last serious window, not Monday or Tuesday.
How do I submit a player for the Prep Talk ballot?
Email sports@buffnews.com by Sunday night. Include the player's name, school, position, the complete stat line, the opponent, and the final score. The editors build the article and ballot from that weekend's results, and a submission that arrives Sunday gives them what they need before the article publishes Monday or Tuesday.
Is there a vote cap?
No per-period or per-device cap is stated. The poll widget accepts repeat votes from the same browser through the Thursday noon cutoff. That structure is consistent with similar Buffalo News Prep Talk polls across multiple confirmed years.

Service quality

Are outside vote-support services used for this kind of poll?
Because the Prep Talk ballot is open, multi-sport, and decided entirely by turnout before Thursday noon, the whole contest comes down to how many real supporters a campaign reaches inside a short window. <a href="/buy-sports-fan-poll-votes/">Sports fan-poll vote support</a> services exist for exactly this kind of weekly regional poll where the gap between mobilizing well and mobilizing late is the difference in the result.

Platform specifics

Is this a football-only ballot or do football nominees compete against other sports?
During the fall season, football nominees share the Prep Talk Boys Athlete of the Week ballot with soccer and cross-country athletes. The poll is multi-sport and does not separate by sport within the fall ballot. A football nominee running five touchdowns is listed alongside a cross-country runner who posted a course record; voters choose from the combined field. There is no separate dedicated football-only public fan vote for WNY.
Where can supporters find the article with the current ballot?
The Prep Talk section at buffalonews.com/sports/high-school/ is the landing point; searching "Prep Talk Boys Athlete of the Week" and sorting by recent date surfaces the current week's article. The Buffalo News also posts ballot links through its Prep Talk Facebook page (@bufnewspreptalk) and X account (@bufnewspreptalk), which are faster ways to find the live article without working the paywall front page.

Targeting & customisation

Does the Thursday noon deadline change how a campaign should be timed?
It does. Most voters assume a weekly poll runs through Sunday or Monday night. For the Prep Talk poll, Wednesday evening is the practical last push — anything sent Thursday morning reaches supporters who may not check before noon. The effective campaign window is Monday through Wednesday: an initial post when the article goes up, a midweek reminder, and a final push Wednesday night. Teams that wait until Thursday morning to mobilize arrive after the window has mostly closed.

Custom orders

Who are confirmed football nominees on record?
Joe Carlson of Starpoint (quarterback/running back, 5 touchdowns and 5 extra points in a 41-15 win over West Seneca East) and Gavin Susfolk of Akron (defensive lineman, 5 sacks — a school record for a sophomore — in a 47-0 shutout of Cleveland Hill) both appeared on the September 23 2023 ballot. Anthony Robinson of Starpoint has been confirmed as a Prep Talk Athlete of the Week winner in a separate week. Those are the specific nominees and winners on public record.
Does the poll cover only Section VI public schools, or are Monsignor Martin Catholic programs included?
Both. Section VI covers public programs in Erie, Niagara, Chautauqua, and Cattaraugus counties — Lancaster, Jamestown, Orchard Park, and Starpoint among them. The Monsignor Martin Athletic Association runs the Catholic schools outside NYSPHSAA — Canisius, St. Francis, St. Joe's, Cardinal O'Hara, and Bishop Timon-St. Jude. Prep Talk nominations draw from both leagues, so a St. Francis nominee and a Lancaster nominee can appear on the same ballot in the same week.
Can a Section VI nominee also appear on the statewide SI New York poll in the same week?
Yes. The two polls are independent editorial selections. The Buffalo News Prep Talk and the statewide High School on SI New York poll both run weekly during the fall season, and an outstanding WNY performance can earn a nomination to each independently. Winning one does not carry over to the other — each ballot is built and decided separately.
Are vote totals published after the poll closes?
No. The Buffalo News Prep Talk does not publish raw vote counts. The winner's name is announced in Prep Talk coverage the following week, but the number of votes each nominee received is not released. Unlike some regional polls where a winning percentage or total appears in the announcement, the Prep Talk result is winner-only.
Which programs have won or been nominated most recently?
Starpoint has two documented connections to the poll — nominee Joe Carlson in September 2023 and confirmed winner Anthony Robinson in a separate week. Akron appeared as a nominee the same week as Carlson, with Gavin Susfolk's five-sack sophomore performance. On the annual Dick Gallagher Buffalo News Player of the Year (a separate editorial award, not a fan vote), Jamestown's Chase Bonta won in 2024 and St. Francis's Trent Buttles won in 2025.
How does this poll differ from the Dick Gallagher Buffalo News Player of the Year?
The Dick Gallagher award is an annual editorial honor — Buffalo News staff select it, and it is not decided by public vote. Jamestown's Chase Bonta received it in 2024; St. Francis's Trent Buttles received it in 2025. The Prep Talk Athlete of the Week is entirely separate: weekly, fan-decided, open to any reader. The two awards can recognize different players in the same season without conflict.

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.

From the blog — guides & case studies

Practical guides, technical deep-dives, and anonymized case studies.60+ articles. Selection rotates.

Victor Williams — founder of Buyvotescontest.com
Victor Williams
Online · usually replies in 5 min

Hi 👋 — drop your contest URL and I'll send a price quote within an hour. No card needed yet.