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Ohio High School Athlete of the Week: How Voting Works & How to Win

The SBLive Ohio / High School on SI statewide fan vote covering every OHSAA sport — football, soccer, cross country, volleyball, golf, basketball — run year-round. Editors at ryan@scorebooklive.com set the field from any sport, anyone can vote with no account, and the poll closes Sunday 11:59 p.m. ET.

Run by: High School on SI / SBLive Ohio Cadence: weekly Vote cap: Unlimited for manual voters; automated scripts explicitly prohibited
Thematic photo for Ohio High School Athlete of the Week showing Ohio High School Athlete of the Week voting workflow

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The thing most visitors don't realize about this poll

Most people who land on a search for "Ohio high school athlete of the week" are looking for the football Player of the Week — a statewide SI / SBLive Ohio football poll that already has its own page. This is a different contest. The Athlete of the Week ballot covers every OHSAA sport, runs year-round, and has put a girls golfer on the same week's field as eleven football nominees. Zoey Merritt from Graham, who shot a 3-under-par 42 in August 2024, appeared alongside Tyrese Buchanan from St. Edward and Jalen Slaughter from Massillon. That is not how the football poll works.

The practical difference goes beyond sport coverage. A cross country campaign looks nothing like a football campaign. Bay's Michael Hanselman ran a 16:17.7 to win a Division II race — a time that earns the respect of distance coaches across the state — but the Bay cross country community does not organize around fan polls the way a Massillon football town does. Understanding that gap is where this poll's strategy starts.

The other thing worth knowing up front: raw vote totals are not published here. The SI / SBLive Ohio Athlete of the Week announces the winner each Monday but does not release the final count. Everything below is built from what the confirmed ballot data actually shows.

What two confirmed ballots reveal about the field

Two 2024 ballots are on record with full nominee lists. Together, they show three things worth knowing before any campaign.

Fifteen nominees is the standard. Both the Aug 25–31 and the Sept 8–14, 2024 ballots listed exactly fifteen names. That is wider than Ohio's football-only regional polls (which typically run six to ten names) and wider than the Cincinnati and Columbus Dispatch polls. In a fifteen-name field, concentrated community turnout behind one nominee carries more weight than it would in a smaller field — the vote splits fifteen ways unless someone organizes.

Football dominates, but does not monopolize. On the Sept 8–14 ballot, twelve of fifteen nominees came from football; three came from cross country, soccer, and golf. In an early-August ballot, volleyball and golf appeared alongside football. Any week's split depends on what OHSAA seasons are live — in winter, basketball and wrestling will fill the non-football slots. A non-football nominee on a football-heavy ballot is not at a natural disadvantage if their community turns out; the same fifteen-name vote-split dynamic applies to all nominees equally.

BallotTotal nomineesFootballNon-football sports
Aug 25–31, 20241511Soccer ×2, Volleyball ×1, Golf ×1
Sept 8–14, 20241511Cross country ×2 (boys + girls), Soccer ×2 (boys + girls), Golf ×1 (girls)

Program geography is statewide, not regional. The Sept 8–14 ballot alone pulled from Lakewood (St. Edward), Massillon, Canton, Toledo, Pickerington (Columbus metro), Fairview, Avon (Lorain County), Walsh Jesuit (Cuyahoga Falls), Princeton (Cincinnati metro), and Graham (Champaign County). That spread means a campaign in Toledo competes against one in the Columbus suburbs on equal footing. There is no metro weighting; the ballot does not favor Cleveland or Columbus by design.

Ohio's prep sports ecosystem and what it means on this ballot

Ohio runs seven OHSAA enrollment divisions (Div I = largest, Div VII = smallest), and the programs that surface on statewide fan polls do not cluster in one tier. St. Edward and Archbishop Hoban are large Catholic private schools in the northeast with national-level football and basketball programs; their alumni networks span the Cleveland metro and reach into national college programs. Massillon Washington and Canton McKinley are public-school institutions whose football histories are woven into small-city identity in a way that moves votes without any external prompting — a Canton McKinley game is a civic event, not just an athletic one.

But the confirmed ballots also show smaller programs: Crestwood (Portage County), Graham (small-town Champaign County), Marion Local (one of the smallest-enrollment programs in the state, and a Div VII dynasty). The division gap does not determine outcomes here — it determines absolute fan base size, not participation rate. A school of 200 students in rural northwest Ohio that turns out its community at fifty percent can out-poll a 3,000-student school that turns out at three percent. That arithmetic is why Div VI Kirtland and Div VII Marion Local are legitimate threats on any statewide ballot.

The non-football sports introduce a different community topology entirely. A girls golf champion like Zoey Merritt from Graham draws on a golf-specific parent and club network — smaller in raw numbers than a football booster base, but often denser and faster to activate because the community is already organized around travel scheduling and score tracking. Distance running communities in northeast Ohio — where Lake, Bay, and Crestwood compete in cross country — have similar tight-knit digital networks. If your nominee comes from one of those sports, the organizing infrastructure already exists; it just needs to be pointed at Sunday night.

Running a campaign from nomination to Sunday close

Getting onto the ballot starts with a well-framed email to ryan@scorebooklive.com — the confirmed Ohio regional editor contact for High School on SI. The submission that works gives the editor what they need to write the nominee entry: athlete name, school, sport, the opponent or event, the full performance (stats, context, what the result meant to the team). A game-deciding moment — Cole Kimble's 19-yard field goal with one second left for Princeton — is as compelling as a pure counting stat. Get that email in Saturday night or Sunday morning, before the week's nominees are finalized.

Once your athlete is on the ballot, the contest is a Sunday deadline with a fifteen-name field. A structured vote campaign exists for exactly this kind of open, uncapped weekly poll — reaching more real voters across the full week rather than relying on a single Sunday push. Manual voters can return through the week; casual supporters who see the link Saturday often forget by Sunday afternoon unless the reminder arrives. The campaigns that consolidate a fifteen-name split are the ones that build across all seven days, not just the final evening.

For more Ohio contests, the Ohio fan-vote guide covers the full statewide picture; the football-only SBLive Ohio poll and the regional metro ballots for Cincinnati and Columbus are there as well. The national directory of weekly prep sports fan votes is at /usa/, and the sports fan-poll vote support guide explains how weekly open-ballot campaigns are typically structured.

How to vote in Ohio High School Athlete of the Week

  1. 1

    Find the current week's ballot on SI

    The poll lives inside a dated article on si.com/high-school/ohio — not on a standalone standalone poll page. After Monday's nominations go up, search the Ohio section for "athlete of the week" and confirm the article date. Old ballots stay live on the page, so checking the date before you vote prevents a misdirected effort.

  2. 2

    Scan the field — sport and stat line first

    Because nominees come from any sport, the widget may list a cross country runner alongside a defensive back alongside a golfer. Each entry shows the performance that earned the nod — read the stat lines to identify your nominee, then cast your vote in the embedded widget.

  3. 3

    Return and vote again through Sunday

    There is no login and no per-period cap on manual voting. The page accepts votes from the same visitor across multiple sessions until the Sunday 11:59 p.m. ET close. Automated scripts and macros are explicitly prohibited by the organizer and can result in votes being thrown out.

  4. 4

    Share before Sunday evening — not after

    Winner write-ups typically go live Monday morning; a campaign that starts Sunday afternoon has only a few hours. Build your sharing loop early in the week so supporters have full days — not just Sunday night — to return and vote.

Ohio High School Athlete of the Week — frequently asked questions

14 answers covering legality, delivery, quality, pricing and platform specifics.

Legality & scope

Are automated votes or scripts allowed?
No. The SBLive / SI poll explicitly prohibits automated scripts and macros; votes cast that way can be thrown out. The ballot is built for manual fan voting, where supporters each cast votes themselves. A result that holds up comes from turning out more real voters, not from cycling one device.

Process & delivery

How do I nominate a player for the Ohio Athlete of the Week?
Send nominations to ryan@scorebooklive.com — that is the confirmed Ohio regional editor contact for SBLive / High School on SI. Include the athlete's full name, school, sport, the performance stat line (opponents, score, individual numbers), and the dates of the performance. Submissions that arrive by Saturday or Sunday morning have the best chance. One editorial note from the confirmed ballots: Cole Kimble (Princeton) was nominated for a 19-yard game-winning field goal with one second left — a stat that looks modest in isolation. The editors reward game-deciding context, not just the biggest counting numbers, so frame your nomination around what the performance meant to the outcome.
When exactly does voting close, and when is the winner announced?
The poll closes Sunday 11:59 p.m. Eastern Time. The winner and write-up typically appear Monday on si.com/high-school/ohio. That Sunday-night deadline is shared with the statewide football Player of the Week poll — both close at the same time, unlike the Dallas regional ballot, which runs to Monday.
What happens if an athlete already won Athlete of the Week — can they win again the same season?
SBLive Ohio's confirmed rules do not publish a one-win-per-season limit for the multi-sport Athlete of the Week. (The Dayton Daily News multi-sport poll is the one that explicitly bars repeat winners in the same season.) Check the current week's ballot article for any stated eligibility restriction; absent a notice, prior winners have been nominated again in subsequent weeks.

Service quality

How does a fan-vote support service fit into a poll with an explicit automation ban?
The ban targets scripts and macros — automated tools that vote without a real person behind each action. A fan-poll vote support service that routes manual, individual votes through real accounts operates differently; it widens the circle of real participants rather than mechanizing one device. The contest is still decided by how many real supporters you bring in before Sunday night.

Platform specifics

Can a Division VII school nominee beat St. Edward or Archbishop Hoban?
Division is not a filter on this ballot. Marion Local (Div VII) and Kirtland (Div VI) are among the most storied programs in Ohio prep sports despite their smallest-enrollment classifications; both appear in the same regional coverage footprint as Division I programs. The ballot does not weight by school size — a nominee from a 200-student school and one from a 2,000-student school compete on exactly equal terms, and community turnout is what separates them.
How does this poll compare to the Cincinnati Enquirer and Columbus Dispatch Athlete of the Week polls?
All three cover multiple sports year-round, but the geography and cap differ. The Cincinnati Enquirer and Columbus Dispatch polls cap voting at once per hour; the SBLive / SI Ohio poll has no stated per-period cap for manual voters. The Cincinnati and Columbus polls also close Friday at 4 p.m. — giving supporters only four days — while the SI Ohio poll runs through Sunday night, producing a longer campaign window. The SI ballot is also statewide, drawing nominees from across Ohio rather than from one metro.

Custom orders

How is this poll different from the SBLive Ohio Football Player of the Week?
The football Player of the Week is a separate SI / SBLive Ohio poll limited to football performers; it runs only during the OHSAA football season (August through November). The Athlete of the Week is active year-round, covers every OHSAA sport, and can include boys and girls on the same ballot in the same week. A golfer, a soccer player, and seven football nominees all appeared together on the Sept 8–14, 2024 ballot.
What sports have appeared on confirmed Ohio Athlete of the Week ballots?
On the two confirmed 2024 ballots: football (most nominations), boys cross country (Michael Hanselman, Bay, 16:17.7), boys soccer (Elijah Jurisch, Crestwood, 4 goals; Hezekiah Garcia, Elyria Catholic), boys golf (Prince Tran, Amherst Steele), girls golf (Zoey Merritt, Graham, 3-under par 42), girls cross country (Daniela Scheffler, Lake, 17:59.5), girls soccer (Sydney Thomas, Avon), and girls volleyball (Brooke Schmidt, Fairview Park). Any OHSAA-sanctioned sport is eligible.
Who was on the Sept 8–14, 2024 ballot?
Fifteen nominees: Tyrese Buchanan (St. Edward, football, 161 rush yds, 2 TDs), Michael Hanselman (Bay, cross country, 16:17.7), Elijah Jurisch (Crestwood, soccer, 4 goals), Cole Kimble (Princeton, football, game-winning 19-yd FG with 1 second left), Burke Lowry (Fairview, football, 12-of-16, 259 yds, 4 TDs), Matt Maxey (Avon, football, 3 TDs incl. 75-yd catch), Zoey Merritt (Graham, girls golf, 42, 3-under), Keller Moten (Walsh Jesuit, football, 3 TDs passing + 97 rush yds), Keith Quincy (Canton McKinley, football, 148 rush yds, 1 TD), Ethan Roksandich (Archbishop Hoban, football, 3 rush TDs), Daniela Scheffler (Lake, girls cross country, 17:59.5), Jalen Slaughter (Massillon, football, 10-of-12, 150 yds, 1 TD), Anthony Sylvester (Toledo Central Catholic, football, 81 rush yds, 2 TDs), Michael Taylor (Pickerington North, football, 5 TDs, 204 yds, 27 carries), Larkyn Vordemark (Sidney, girls soccer, 93 career goals tying program record).
Does the poll include girls athletes?
Yes. The confirmed Sept 2024 ballot included Zoey Merritt (Graham, golf), Daniela Scheffler (Lake, cross country), Larkyn Vordemark (Sidney, soccer), and Sydney Thomas (Avon, soccer) alongside eleven male nominees. The format varies by week — some weeks run separate boys and girls polls, others combine them. The ballot article confirms the format for that week.
Does winning Athlete of the Week put a player on any other ballot?
No carry-over is confirmed. The SI / SBLive Ohio Athlete of the Week is an independent weekly fan vote; winning does not automatically place a player on a state-of-the-year ballot or any other external award. It is its own recognition, decided weekly by fan turnout.
How many nominees appear on a typical ballot?
Both confirmed 2024 ballots listed fifteen nominees. That is a wider field than most regional football-only polls, which typically run six to ten names. A wider field means the vote splits more ways — a community that consolidates around one nominee has a clearer structural advantage against a scattered multi-school field.
Where can I find past Ohio Athlete of the Week ballots?
Past ballot articles remain indexed at si.com/high-school/ohio. Searching "athlete of the week" in that section returns the archived articles, each titled with the date range. The raw vote totals are not published — only the winning name — so prior articles are the only public record of who appeared on each week's field.

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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