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North Carolina High School Girls Basketball Player of the Week: How Voting Works & How to Win

High School on SI runs a statewide weekly fan vote each girls basketball season across all NCHSAA classifications. Editors nominate roughly 10 players, anyone can vote with no account, and the ballot closes Sunday at 11:59 p.m. Pacific — a tighter window than the football polls, with fewer names splitting the vote.

Run by: High School on SI / SBLive Sports Cadence: weekly Vote cap: Unlimited — no per-period vote cap posted
Thematic photo for North Carolina High School Girls Basketball Player of the Week showing North Carolina High School Girls Basketball Player of the Week voting workflow

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The thing a first-time voter here gets wrong

Most people who find this poll look for a vote total. They want to know how many votes it takes to win, whether 500 is enough, whether 2,000 is the ceiling. SI does not publish those numbers. The winner is announced the next week, inside the new ballot article, with no count attached. So the competitive landscape is mostly dark — and that is the first thing worth knowing, because it changes how you plan a campaign.

What the data does reveal is the field structure. The girls basketball poll carries roughly 10 nominees per week. The NC football poll, run by the same organizer, lists 15. Ten names in a weekly ballot means each competitor draws a larger average share even when the vote is evenly split. A single school that organizes its own base can move from baseline noise to a genuine plurality faster here than on a 15-name football ballot — because there are fewer targets dividing the total.

That compression is the structural fact a campaign should start with. Not "how many votes do I need," but "how many of the 10 names will actually have organized support behind them." Most weeks, only three or four will. The rest of the field is passively nominated. The race belongs to whoever does the organizing.

What the Feb 10, 2025 ballot reveals about the field

Ten nominees. Five recognizably different regions of North Carolina on one list. That is the Feb 10, 2025 ballot, and it is instructive because the geographic spread is typical, not unusual.

NomineeSchoolRegion
Ashanti FoxUnion PinesMoore County (Sandhills)
NyKira ArringtonSouth MecklenburgCharlotte metro
Janiyah BoydMonroeUnion County
Brooklyn SaundersButlerGaston County
Kayden HendersonEast HendersonHenderson County (Hendersonville)
Sara LariosAsheville ChristianWestern NC (private)
Andrea BrownLumbertonRobeson County (southeast)
Jordynn ParnellSouth ViewCumberland County (Fayetteville)
Mia JonesNortheasternAlamance County (Triad)
Lily ErvinLexingtonDavidson County (Triad)

Lumberton and Asheville Christian are separated by roughly 280 miles on a map that runs from the Atlantic coastal plain to the Blue Ridge foothills. They land on the same ten-name ballot because the poll is statewide and genuinely classification-blind. Sara Larios of Asheville Christian competes outside NCHSAA classifications entirely as a private school; she still makes the same list as players from large public programs in Charlotte.

The practical consequence: most voters on any given week will not recognize more than one or two of the ten names. There is no Charlotte-wide name recognition that defeats a well-organized Lumberton or Moore County campaign. A school 90 miles from any other nominee on the list is not at a disadvantage — it is exactly as reachable to its own community as South Mecklenburg is to its own. Local organization is the whole game.

What earns a spot on the ballot

The stat lines from the Jan 21, 2025 nominees give the clearest picture available. That week included a player with 31 points, 11 rebounds, 5 steals, and 8 assists in one game, and another with 29 points, 8 rebounds, 5 steals, and 8 assists. A freshman posted 30 points and 11 rebounds. Another nominee had a game-winning layup on top of 12 points and 12 rebounds.

These are complete games, not just scoring nights. The SI editors appear to reward all-around contributions — someone who impacts possession, defense, and scoring in one box score stands out more than a pure scorer with nothing else on the line. A 40-point game from a team that lost in blowout might land a nomination; a 25-point, 10-assist, 7-steal double-double from the same week probably has a better chance.

Getting nominated at all requires that the performance reaches the editorial team. SI's North Carolina editors build the field from reported results. A coaching staff or program that sends the stat line — with the opponent, the score, and a note on any record or streak — before the ballot is set is doing the first and hardest part of the campaign work. A great game nobody flags can be missed entirely.

How the Sunday close shapes the race

Sunday is the deadline, full stop. The girls basketball ballot closes at 11:59 p.m. Pacific on Sunday, which is the same close as the statewide North Carolina football poll — but unlike the SI regional football ballots (Dallas / North Texas closes Monday), there is no extra day for basketball. A campaign that was still catching up on Monday has already lost.

For vote campaigns running on this poll, that compresses the active window to roughly Monday through Sunday after publication. The best approach: get the school's network moving early in the week — the team's own group chats, the parents' association, alumni channels — and treat Sunday afternoon as a second push rather than the first one. Late Sunday is when people check their phones between watching games, which is a real conversion window, but it should be a reinforcement, not the start.

For more on how weekly fan-vote campaigns work in general, the how-to guide covers the cadence; the full North Carolina contest index is at /usa/north-carolina/, and the national directory of high school fan polls is at /usa/.

How to vote in North Carolina High School Girls Basketball Player of the Week

  1. 1

    Find the current week's poll article on SI

    The ballot lives inside a weekly article at si.com/high-school/north-carolina, not on a permanent page. The hub at si.com/high-school/north-carolina/athlete-of-the-week lists recent polls. Check the publish date before voting — older closed ballots stay online, and the embedded widget will look identical to an active one.

  2. 2

    Read the stat lines before you pick

    Each of the roughly 10 nominees is listed with the performance that earned the nomination: point totals, rebounding, assists, steals, the opponent. The Feb 10, 2025 ballot included stat lines ranging from 23 points to 40 — it is worth a minute's read before you commit a vote.

  3. 3

    Cast your vote in the embedded poll widget

    Select your player in the widget and submit. No account is created and no confirmation email arrives — the vote registers immediately. You can return and vote again through the week; there is no posted per-visit limit.

  4. 4

    Sunday close is the hard stop

    The poll shuts at 11:59 p.m. Pacific on Sunday. Unlike the SI football regional polls, which close Monday, there is no extra day here — the girls basketball ballot and Sunday are the same deadline. Late Sunday afternoon is the last realistic push window before the race is settled.

North Carolina High School Girls 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 scripted voting?
SI's confirmed national disclaimer states that votes generated by script, macro, or other automated means are not allowed. Nominees can be disqualified if the organizer determines that automated methods were used. The poll is designed for manual fan voting, and a result that holds up comes from reaching more real people.

Process & delivery

Does this poll close Sunday, like the NC football polls?
Partly. The statewide North Carolina football Player of the Week closes Sunday at 11:59 p.m. Pacific — and so does this girls basketball poll. But the SI Dallas / North Texas regional football ballot closes Monday. For the NC girls basketball poll, Sunday night is the final deadline; there is no extra day.
Does SI publish the raw vote totals after the poll closes?
No. High School on SI announces the winner in the following week's poll article but does not publish the final vote count or the breakdown by nominee. The competitive picture — whether a winner took 30% or 60% — is not on record.
Can a player be nominated more than once in the same season?
The football facts file confirms J.J. Gulat of Dixon won the NC football poll in both Week 2 and Week 4 of the 2025 season, so repeat nominations are possible there. SI has not published a rule barring repeat nominations for the girls basketball poll, but the organizers build the field fresh each week from that week's performances.
What is the best way to ensure a player gets nominated in the first place?
The editors at High School on SI build the field from that week's reported results. Getting a player's stat line — position, game totals, opponent, score — in front of the SI North Carolina editorial team before the week's ballot is set gives the best chance of a nomination. Stat lines like 30+ points or an all-around double-double with multiple steals are the kinds of performances that have made recent fields.

Service quality

How does outside vote support work for an uncapped poll like this?
Because the ballot is open to unlimited voting and is decided purely by turnout, a team that reaches more supporters before Sunday night wins. For campaigns that want structured help extending that reach, <a href="/buy-sports-fan-poll-votes/">sports fan-poll vote support</a> is available for weekly SI-style polls.

Platform specifics

How many nominees are on the girls basketball ballot each week?
Roughly 10 — fewer than the 15 on the NC football ballot. That narrower field changes the math: with 10 names splitting the vote instead of 15, a campaign that consolidates even a modest base of genuine supporters can move a nominee's share meaningfully.
Is the girls basketball poll on a different page from the football poll?
They share the same state hub at si.com/high-school/north-carolina/athlete-of-the-week, but each sport's weekly poll is a separate article. The girls basketball ballot is not on the same page as the football ballot; a voter has to find the correct sport's article for that week.

Targeting & customisation

How does the geographic spread of the ballot affect campaign strategy?
The Feb 10 ballot ran from Lumberton in Robeson County to Asheville Christian in Buncombe County — roughly 280 miles apart. A school in Moore County (Union Pines) and a school in Cumberland County (South View) are on the same list. That spread means most voters will not personally know more than one or two nominees, so a school that organizes its own network tightly will outperform a school that relies on general name recognition.

Custom orders

Who were the confirmed nominees on the Feb 10, 2025 ballot?
The ten nominees were Ashanti Fox (Union Pines), NyKira Arrington (South Mecklenburg), Janiyah Boyd (Monroe), Brooklyn Saunders (Butler), Kayden Henderson (East Henderson), Sara Larios (Asheville Christian), Andrea Brown (Lumberton), Jordynn Parnell (South View), Mia Jones (Northeastern), and Lily Ervin (Lexington). The ballot stretched from the Charlotte metro to Moore County to Robeson County to the mountains — ten schools, at least five distinct regions of the state.
What kind of stat lines earn a nomination on this poll?
Based on the Jan 21, 2025 nominees, a 30-point night is table stakes — that week included a player with 31 points, 11 rebounds, 5 steals, and 8 assists, and another with 29 points, 8 rebounds, 5 steals, and 8 assists. A freshman with 30 points and 11 rebounds also made the field. The editors reward complete games and genuinely unusual stat combinations, not just point totals.
Does a player have to be from a large-classification school to get nominated?
No. The Feb 10 ballot included Asheville Christian Academy, a private school that competes outside NCHSAA classifications entirely, alongside players from large public programs like South Mecklenburg. Sara Larios of Asheville Christian made the same ten-name field as players from 7A and 8A public schools. The ballot is statewide and classification-blind by design.
Where can I see past NC girls basketball Player of the Week winners?
Each week's winner is named at the top of the following week's poll article on si.com/high-school/north-carolina. Older articles stay online, so browsing back through the season's posts is the only public record — SI does not maintain a standalone winners archive for this poll.
Does winning this poll connect to any end-of-season award?
No. High School on SI describes the poll as a fun, lighthearted way for fans to show support; it is not connected to NCHSAA postseason honors or any annual award. A weekly win is a published recognition on SI's platform and nothing beyond that.

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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