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Read more →The High School on SI statewide fan vote for the best North Carolina prep baseball performance of the week. SI's editors pick 10 nominees from across all eight NCHSAA classifications; anyone can vote unlimited times with no account, and the poll closes Sunday at 11:59 p.m. Pacific.
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There is no Monday window here. The football Player of the Week closes Monday night on SI's Texas regional polls; the NC baseball poll closes Sunday. That one-day difference changes everything about when to push. (For a general breakdown of how weekly fan-vote polls run, the fan-vote how-to guide covers the recurring cadence.)
A poll article published on Monday or Tuesday gives supporters close to six days of runway. One published Thursday or Friday compresses to three. SI doesn't announce when the new article drops — you find it by checking the hub. The supporters who find it Tuesday and start Tuesday have a structural advantage over the ones who find it Saturday and scramble.
The second thing: SI publishes the winner in the following week's article, not in a standalone announcement. If you don't check the next poll's intro, you'll never see the result. That buried format means most casual followers don't track the race in real time — which matters, because the supporters who do track it are the ones shaping the outcome.
The April 21, 2025 ballot is the clearest window into what this poll actually looks like. Ten players, all spring performances, all from different corners of North Carolina:
| Nominee | School | Standout line |
|---|---|---|
| J.C. Woolard | Pinecrest | 3 H, 3 RBI in 11-5 win |
| Jayden Parker | St. Pauls | one-hitter, 11 K, 2-run single |
| Simon Quinn | Greenfield School | complete game, 3-for-3 with RBI |
| Xzavier Sinclair | Red Springs | 7 K, 2-for-4, 2 RBI |
| Jeremiah Battle | Southern Nash | seven-hitter, 2-for-5, RBI double |
| Jonathan Pate | Terry Sanford | three-hitter, 9 K |
| Jay Secretarski | Asheville | 4-for-4, 3 RBI, hitless relief |
| Zack Wester | Pisgah | perfect game, 10 K |
| Rian Jones | West Henderson | multiple games with HRs and doubles |
| Cooper Beck | Central Davidson | 2-for-2, HR, triple, 3 RBI |
Look at the geography. Pisgah is in Haywood County, deep in the western mountains. Red Springs is in Robeson County, southeastern coastal plain. Greenfield School is a private independent program in Wilson. Southern Nash is Nash County, east of Raleigh. A poll that puts all of those on one ballot in one week is genuinely statewide — there is no Charlotte-centric or Triangle-first bias built into the nomination structure.
And the range of performances matters too. Zack Wester's perfect game is the kind of line that almost demands a nomination — 27 up, 27 down, 10 strikeouts. But it competed directly with Jayden Parker's one-hitter and two-way line, and with hitters like Cooper Beck (home run, triple, 3 RBI in 2 at-bats). SI does not sort by position. A pitcher and a cleanup hitter are on the same list, and the fan vote decides.
North Carolina's baseball geography is not uniform. The Charlotte metro (Mecklenburg and the ring counties) runs dense with programs and large school populations — but a large fan base and an organized one are different things. A program like Pisgah in Haywood County draws on a community where the high school baseball team is one of the central events of spring. The alumni network is compact and geographically concentrated. When Wester threw his perfect game, the Haywood County community already knew about it by Saturday. That kind of embedded attention converts fast on a fan poll.
Eastern NC programs — St. Pauls in Robeson County, Southern Nash in Nash County — sit in regions where high school sports are genuinely community-defining. Robeson County is one of the most sports-dedicated communities in the state; St. Pauls has deep alumni reach across the county and beyond. A nomination there does not need a social media strategy. It needs the phone tree that already exists.
The Triangle and Charlotte programs face a different challenge. More alumni, more social followers, more total potential voters — but those networks are diffuse. A Pinecrest supporter in Moore County is reaching an audience scattered from Southern Pines to Fayetteville to Raleigh. The message has to travel further and through more loosely connected groups before it converts. That is not an insurmountable problem, but it means the decisive factor in any week is not which school has more people — it is which community moves first and fastest.
Spring baseball weeks move fast. Games happen Tuesday, Thursday, and Saturday; the SI editors compile nominations and post the new poll sometime early-to-mid week. By the time most fans notice the article, Wednesday or Thursday, a third of the voting window is already gone.
The supporters who find the poll Monday or Tuesday and share it into the right channels — the team parent group text, the booster Facebook page, the dugout Instagram story — are working a six-day window. The ones who find it Friday are working two days. Both are open; only one is comfortable. Because SI does not cap the poll, a wide and early push compounds: the same voters who go back Thursday go back again Saturday. A late, narrow push has no time to compound at all.
For players from programs where the fan base is geographically scattered or where the community does not follow SI's NC hub closely, structured fan-poll vote support is one way to make up ground when the organic window is short. For the broader context on North Carolina prep sports fan votes, the North Carolina sports fan-vote directory covers other active polls; the national index lives at /usa/.
The ballot lives inside a dated article at si.com/high-school/north-carolina, not on a permanent page. During the spring season, search the hub for the newest "baseball player of the week" post — older weeks' polls remain accessible online but are already closed, so confirm the publish date before you vote.
Each nominee is listed with the performance that earned the nod: pitch lines, strikeout totals, batting figures, and the opponent. The write-ups vary week to week — one week might lead with a perfect game, the next with a multi-game hitting streak. Read them before committing.
Tap your player in the embedded widget. No login, no email, no cap — the poll accepts repeated votes from the same browser through the Sunday close. One dedicated supporter can contribute meaningfully over several days.
SI does not send notifications. The winner's name appears at the top of the following week's poll article ("Congratulations to last week's winner"). Check back Sunday or Monday to see the result before the next ballot opens.
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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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