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Charlotte Observer Girls High School Athlete of the Week: How Voting Works & How to Win

The Charlotte Observer's weekly fan vote for the top girls high school athlete in the Charlotte metro — multi-sport, year-round, closes Friday at noon Eastern. The same paper runs an independent boys poll simultaneously; this ballot covers girls only, pulling nominees from ten counties plus CISAA private schools with no account or login required to vote.

Run by: Charlotte Observer Market: Charlotte, NC Cadence: weekly Vote cap: Unlimited — "You may vote as often as you like" (Observer's confirmed language)
Thematic photo for Charlotte Observer Girls High School Athlete of the Week showing Charlotte Observer Girls High School Athlete of the Week voting workflow

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What Bella-Marie Black's regional sweep reveals about this poll

Start with the most specific thing on record. The May 2026 girls ballot included Bella-Marie Black of Mallard Creek, who had just won both the 100m at 11.54 and the 200m at 24.17 at the NC 8A Western Regional — two sprint titles, one week, at the region's largest classification. That kind of performance would anchor a ballot anywhere. But she was one of eight nominees, and Maggie Murphy of Cannon School was also on the same list with 6 goals, 7 assists, and a 16-7 state quarterfinal win in lacrosse. Elise Wrenholt, also from Cannon, had won the 3200m and the 800m and anchored her relay to a school record in the same seven days.

The point isn't to compare a sprinter to a lacrosse midfielder. The point is that the Observer's editorial bar is exceptional performance — and in a week when multiple athletes clear that bar in different sports, the winner is whichever community organized the most votes before Friday noon. Mallard Creek is a large public school with one of the strongest track programs in the state. Cannon School is a CISAA private with a tight, connected alumni network and a lacrosse program that was in the state quarterfinals. Different fan bases. Same ballot. Same deadline.

That is the structure of every week here, and it is worth understanding before anything else.

The Charlotte metro's school geography — who turns out, and how fast

The Observer draws from ten counties, and each produces a different kind of voting community. Getting that right is what separates campaigns that move before Friday noon from ones that don't.

Large Mecklenburg County public schools — Mallard Creek, Myers Park, North Mecklenburg, South Mecklenburg, Olympic — carry wide alumni networks and strong institutional followings. The trade-off is size: a vote link has to travel through many loosely connected groups before it converts, and five days is tight. Olympic's Bryce Nixon ran a 300m school record in February 2026; whether that nomination translated into votes depended entirely on how fast that link spread through the school's community.

The CISAA private schools work differently. Cannon School's lacrosse program appeared on the confirmed May ballot with two nominees (Murphy and Wrenholt) in the same week. The school's parent and alumni network is small and direct — one organized message through the right channels reaches most of the relevant people quickly. Providence Day had two nominees on the same ballot as well (Adams and Hee), in different track events. Charlotte Catholic's girls programs have appeared consistently across the Observer's coverage over multiple seasons. These are tight communities that know each other and communicate through direct channels, not sprawling social feeds.

Then there are the outer-county programs: Gaston Christian (Gaston County, soccer), Union Academy (Union County, track), Cuthbertson (Union County), Metrolina Christian (Cabarrus County). County-specific identity runs deep in those communities — a Gaston County school's fan base is geographically separate from Charlotte-city alumni networks, which can mean concentrated local reach if the nomination lands early enough in the week.

The May 2026 ballot: eight athletes, three sports, one deadline

The May 15, 2026 ballot is the sharpest snapshot of what this poll actually is. Eight nominees, three sports, schools from Mecklenburg, Gaston, and Cabarrus counties plus CISAA:

AthleteSchoolSport / Performance
Emma AdamsProvidence DayTrack — CISAA triple jump title (35 ft); 2nd in 100H (15.75 PR)
Bella-Marie BlackMallard CreekTrack — 8A Western Regional 100m (11.54) & 200m (24.17) champion
Kiri CampbellMetrolina ChristianTrack — 4 event wins at MAC Conference; 2 meet records, 2 school records
Evelyn HeeProvidence DayTrack — CISAA 100m title (15.21); 2nd LJ and TJ
Bailey KnoxGaston ChristianSoccer — 4 goals in state QF win (4-1)
Maggie MurphyCannon SchoolLacrosse — 6 G / 7 A in state QF; 57 G / 39 A on the season
Deanna RochaNorth MecklenburgSoccer — 4 G / 2 A on Senior Night (10-1 win)
Elise WrenholtCannon SchoolTrack — 3200m (11:05), 800m (2:18); 4x1600m school record (4:04.39)

Four of the eight came from track, and two of those four were Providence Day nominees in different events. Two came from Cannon School in different sports. In other words, two schools each put multiple athletes on one ballot — which is itself a data point about how the Observer selects nominees in a week when multiple athletes from the same school perform at a high level.

It also means those two schools were competing for votes from overlapping communities. A Cannon School supporter had to choose between Murphy and Wrenholt. A Providence Day fan had to choose between Adams and Hee. That kind of internal split can determine the outcome of a close week, and it's not hypothetical — it was the structure of this particular ballot.

Running a real campaign in five days — from nomination to Friday noon

Five days sounds like enough time. It isn't, if you treat the first two as free.

The Observer's sports desk builds the girls ballot from the week's results, and the nomination window is early in the week following the performance. Reaching out through charlotteobserver.com's contact channels with the athlete's name, sport, stat line, and opponent — sent Monday or Tuesday — gives editors what they need before the ballot is set. A standout performance no one flags can be left off. And a player who doesn't make the ballot can't win it.

Once the ballot is live, the math is reach rather than rate. The Observer's rule is "you may vote as often as you like," and no account is required. But a single device voting repeatedly does far less than a hundred people each casting a handful of votes before Friday noon. The job is to widen the circle: every teammate texting their contacts Tuesday night, the school's parent network posting Wednesday, one final push Thursday evening. That Thursday reminder has to land before Friday morning — because by noon Friday, it is over.

For campaigns that want structured support in an open unlimited poll, vote-support services built for weekly fan votes exist for exactly this format. The how-to guide walks through the recurring weekly cadence. More Charlotte-area and North Carolina contests are at /usa/north-carolina/, and the full national directory is at /usa/.

How to vote in Charlotte Observer Girls High School Athlete of the Week

  1. 1

    Find the current week's Observer girls article

    The girls poll lives inside its own dated article on charlotteobserver.com/sports/high-school/ — separate from the boys poll, published the same week. The Observer also pushes each ballot to Yahoo Sports; searching "Observer girls high school athlete vote" often returns the Yahoo link faster. Open the most recent article and confirm the date; earlier weeks' ballots remain online but closed.

  2. 2

    Review each nominee's sport and stat line

    Because the ballot is multi-sport, any given week's field might include a track sprinter, a lacrosse midfielder, a soccer striker, and a softball pitcher on the same list. Each nominee is listed with her sport, school, and the performance that earned the nod. The stat lines are the only way to compare across sports, so they are worth a look before voting.

  3. 3

    Vote, then return before Friday noon Eastern

    Select the nominee in the embedded widget. The Observer's stated rule is "you may vote as often as you like," and the widget asks for nothing — no registration, no email address. The hard cutoff is Friday at noon Eastern — not midnight, not Sunday. Plan any final push for Thursday evening through Friday morning.

  4. 4

    Find the prior winner in the following week's article

    The Observer announces the previous week's winner at the top of the next ballot article. There is no standalone results page; the new poll and the prior winner are published together, typically early in the week.

Charlotte Observer Girls High School Athlete 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 scripted voting?
The Observer's fan polls are built for manual reader participation. Votes generated by scripts, macros, or other automated means run against the poll's intent and are subject to removal. A result that holds is built from reaching more real people, not from a single device cycling through rapid automated submissions.

Process & delivery

Why does the poll close Friday at noon instead of Sunday night?
The Observer controls its own publication schedule, and Friday noon Eastern is the confirmed close. That is structurally different from the SI/SBLive North Carolina polls, which close Sunday at 11:59 p.m. Pacific — roughly two and a half days later. A Charlotte metro campaign on the Observer poll runs Monday through Thursday, with Friday morning as the final window. Anyone who plans around a Sunday-night finish will miss the deadline.
Is there a vote cap on the girls poll?
The Observer's confirmed language is "You may vote as often as you like." No restriction by hour or device is posted alongside it. The only hard limit is Friday noon Eastern — every vote cast before then counts.
Does the girls ballot run independently from the boys poll?
Yes. The Observer runs a boys poll and a girls poll separately each week — different nominees, different articles, different winners, same Friday noon close. Voting in the girls poll does not carry over to the boys poll. Both are published on charlotteobserver.com/sports/high-school/ and syndicated to Yahoo Sports.

Service quality

Where do vote-support services fit into a poll like this?
Because the ballot is open, unlimited, and settled entirely by turnout before Friday noon, the contest is how many real supporters you reach in five days. Services like <a href="/buy-sports-fan-poll-votes/">sports fan-poll vote support</a> are built for weekly open polls of this format.

Platform specifics

What sports appear on the girls ballot?
It depends on the season. The confirmed May 2026 ballot covered track, soccer, and lacrosse — with nominees from four different disciplines in those sports alone. Winter weeks include basketball and wrestling. Spring adds softball, tennis, and swimming. Fall brings cross country and volleyball alongside early basketball. The ballot reflects whatever girls sports are active that week in the Charlotte metro, which means it rarely looks the same twice across the school year.
Which counties and schools are eligible?
The Observer draws nominees from Mecklenburg, Union, Gaston, Cabarrus, Iredell, Lincoln, Rowan, Catawba, Cleveland, and Stanly counties, plus CISAA private schools in the Charlotte area. The confirmed May 2026 ballot shows the range: Mallard Creek (Mecklenburg), Cannon School (CISAA), Providence Day (CISAA), Gaston Christian (Gaston County), North Mecklenburg (Mecklenburg), and Metrolina Christian (Cabarrus County) all appeared on the same ballot.
Do CISAA private schools compete on the same ballot as public schools?
Yes. The May 2026 ballot confirms it — Providence Day, Cannon School, and Metrolina Christian all appeared alongside public schools like Mallard Creek and North Mecklenburg. The Observer does not separate private-school nominees onto a separate list, and classification or enrollment does not gate the field. A small CISAA school with a mobilized community competes directly against a large Mecklenburg County public program.
Is the ballot syndicated anywhere besides charlotteobserver.com?
Yes. The Observer publishes each weekly girls poll on its own site and distributes it through Yahoo Sports. The Yahoo link is often easier to find via search. Both carry the same live ballot; a vote cast on either version counts equally.
How does the Observer's coverage of girls sports shape the ballot?
The Observer tracks girls sports across twelve disciplines year-round, and the ballot reflects that coverage. A week in which no football is being played is still a week with a ballot — lacrosse, tennis, track, softball, and soccer all generate nominees at the right times of year. A program that is strong in multiple sports can appear multiple times across a season, as Cannon School's lacrosse program did in the confirmed May 2026 data with Maggie Murphy's 57-goal season.

Custom orders

Who was on the May 2026 girls ballot?
Eight nominees: Emma Adams (Providence Day, track — CISAA triple jump champion at 35 ft, second in 100m hurdles with a 15.75 PR), Bella-Marie Black (Mallard Creek, track — won the 100m at 11.54 and the 200m at 24.17 at the NC 8A Western Regional), Kiri Campbell (Metrolina Christian, track — won four events at the MAC Conference meet, setting two meet records and two school records in the same day), Evelyn Hee (Providence Day, track — won the 100m at the CISAA championships in 15.21, second in long jump and triple jump), Bailey Knox (Gaston Christian, soccer — 4 goals in a 4-1 state quarterfinal win), Maggie Murphy (Cannon School, lacrosse — 6 goals and 7 assists in a 16-7 state quarterfinal, 57 goals and 39 assists on the season), Deanna Rocha (North Mecklenburg, soccer — 4 goals and 2 assists on Senior Night in a 10-1 win), and Elise Wrenholt (Cannon School, track — won the 3200m at 11:05 and the 800m at 2:18, anchored the 4x1600m relay to a school-record 4:04.39).
What did the February 2026 girls ballot include?
The confirmed February 13, 2026 ballot was an indoor track week. Nominees included Brihanna Ashcraft (Union Academy, track — won the 55m, 300m, and 500m at the Yadkin Valley conference meet and ran on the winning 4x400m relay), Hampton Garrido (Mount Pleasant, track — won the 1000m at a personal-best 2:56.90 at the Piedmont Last Chance meet), Colby McCollum (Cuthbertson, track — won the 500m at 1:19.44 PR and the 1600m at 5:10.61), Bryce Nixon (Olympic, track — ran a 300m school record of 35.79 and helped the 4x200m relay to a school-record 1:29.17 as runner-up), and Kaela Tyson (Piedmont, track — won the 55m hurdles at 8.29 PR, won the long jump at 16-7, and ran 7.59 for runner-up in the 55m).
How are nominees chosen, and can I submit an athlete?
The Observer's sports desk selects nominees from the week's results. Reaching out through charlotteobserver.com's contact channels with a complete stat line, the sport, and the opponent — sent early in the week following the performance — puts a name in front of the editors before the ballot is finalized. Performances that nobody flags can be missed.
Does winning the Observer girls poll connect to any statewide award?
No confirmed connection. The Observer weekly win stands on its own — the winner is named in the next article, on the Observer's high school sports coverage. There is no confirmed link between an Observer weekly win and any NCHSAA or regional end-of-season honor.

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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