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South Carolina High School Football Player of the Week: How Voting Works & How to Win

The High School on SI / SBLive statewide fan vote for the best South Carolina prep football performance of the week. Editors draw from all SCHSL classifications and SCISA private schools — up to 15 nominees per ballot — and the poll closes Sunday at 11:59 p.m. Pacific. Vote totals are never published; only the winner is named the following week.

Run by: High School on SI / SBLive Sports Cadence: weekly Vote cap: Unlimited — no per-hour or per-device limit is posted across any reviewed poll
Thematic photo for South Carolina High School Football Player of the Week showing South Carolina High School Football Player of the Week voting workflow

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The thing this poll does not tell you

Most fan-vote polls show a leaderboard. Some post a percentage. A few publish the raw count after the poll closes. The South Carolina High School Football Player of the Week does none of those things. The running tally is invisible, the margin at close is never published, and the only number you ever get is zero — because there is no number. The winner's name appears in the next week's article, and that is the full public record.

That single fact changes how a campaign here should think about itself. In a poll where you can watch a percentage climb, a team can see when it is ahead and pace accordingly. Here, you are voting into a black box that closes Sunday at 11:59 p.m. Pacific and reveals nothing until Tuesday. The only rational response is to treat every hour before Sunday night as though the race is close — because there is no data that says otherwise.

The second thing worth knowing before you do anything else: the ballot is not three names or six names. The South Carolina poll runs roughly 15 nominees every week — confirmed at exactly 15 in multiple 2025 polls. On a 15-name ballot the vote is split many ways, and a plurality of 20 to 25 percent can win. That changes the arithmetic of a campaign. You do not need to beat one rival by a wide margin; you need to hold a lead against a fractured field where no one else consolidates either.

What the confirmed winners reveal about this ballot

Four winners are confirmed across the 2024–25 season, and they point in different directions on the state map.

Jamar Grissett won for Irmo in Week 0 (Aug 26, 2025 ballot). One week later, Drevon Dopson won for Irmo again — the same school, back-to-back weeks. Irmo is in Lexington County, a program that finished 2025 as 4A state champion over James F. Byrnes 35–32, and its two-week run on the SI ballot tracked that momentum in real time. The practical signal: when a school is hot and its community is already activated from playoff success, the fan-vote poll reflects it. Irmo did not win once and go dormant; its supporters stayed engaged for a second consecutive ballot.

Aiden Gibson of Woodruff won the week of Oct 20, 2025. Woodruff is a 3A program in Spartanburg County — not a school competing against Dutch Fork or Summerville on Friday nights in any bracket they share. On the ballot, it won anyway. Khalid Sherman of Loris won in December 2024; Loris is 2A. Two of the four confirmed winners came from programs at 3A or below, competing on the same ballot as 5A Division I nominees.

The table below sets out what we know for each confirmed winner:

WinnerSchoolClassRegionPoll Week
Jamar GrissettIrmo4ALexington Co.Aug 26, 2025
Drevon DopsonIrmo4ALexington Co.Sept 2, 2025
Aiden GibsonWoodruff3ASpartanburg Co.Oct 20, 2025
Khalid ShermanLoris2AHorry Co.Dec 14, 2024

What the table does not show is anyone from Dutch Fork — the program that won four consecutive 5A DI state titles from 2022 through 2025 under Tom Knotts. Kyle Henry appeared as a Dutch Fork nominee on the Oct 27 ballot, but the confirmed winner that week is Aiden Gibson of Woodruff. The state's dominant on-field program has not produced a confirmed ballot winner in this data set. That is the clearest illustration available that enrollment and recent playoff success are not reliable predictors of poll outcomes here.

A ballot that stretches from the Lowcountry to the Upstate

South Carolina's geography shapes the fan vote in ways that are not obvious from the nominee list. The state runs roughly 220 miles from the Upstate counties bordering North Carolina down to the Lowcountry coast, and the communities along that corridor do not share media markets, alumni networks, or anything else beyond the same SCHSL classification ladder.

The Oct 27, 2025 ballot spanned that full range: Tre Segarra from James F. Byrnes in Duncan (Spartanburg County, Upstate), Connor Dantzler from James Island (Charleston County, Lowcountry), Grayson Rimpf from Camden (Kershaw County, Midlands), Trevon Williamson from Gray Collegiate Academy in West Columbia. Schools from the Greenville metro, the Columbia suburbs, the Charleston coast, and points between were on the same 15-name list the same Sunday. A campaign mobilizing votes in Horry County for a Loris nominee is drawing on a community that has essentially no overlap with one pushing for a Dutch Fork player in Irmo.

That geographic spread is worth naming plainly: there is no single media voice or alumni chain that covers the whole ballot. A school in Spartanburg County running a strong campaign does not crowd out a school in Beaufort County — they are drawing on entirely separate pools. The ballot does not reward the team with the widest statewide reach; it rewards the team whose specific community consolidates before Sunday night closes. Loris winning in December 2024 is the proof — a 2A school from Horry County, drawing on one tight coastal community, beating whatever field it faced that week.

Getting on the ballot and running a real Sunday campaign

Two separate problems decide any week here: getting your player's name into the 15, and then moving real people to the poll before Sunday night.

The Dallas / North Texas ballot posts a direct nomination email (Bob Lundeberg). The South Carolina poll's editorial contact is not as publicly listed, but the mechanism is the same: SI's South Carolina editors build the field from the weekend's results and community outreach. A complete performance summary — player, school, position, stat line, opponent and score — submitted to the editorial team by Saturday night gives the editors what they need before the ballot is assembled. A strong game that nobody flags can be passed over for one someone advocated for.

Once the ballot is live, the 15-name field means you do not need a majority — you need to hold a lead against a split. The practical job is reaching real people who will vote Sunday, not cycling one device through the weekend. Every player texting their own circle, the school's social accounts posting Saturday and again Sunday morning, an alumni group getting a reminder before the close: those are the contacts that decide it. Because the total is hidden and the close is Sunday, the last few hours matter more than the early tally you cannot see anyway.

For campaigns that need a structured edge on a 15-name ballot before Sunday closes, sports fan-poll vote support is built for exactly this kind of weekly, open, uncapped poll. The broader mechanics of recurring fan votes are covered in the how-to guide; other South Carolina contests are at /usa/south-carolina/ and the national directory at /usa/.

How to vote in South Carolina High School Football Player of the Week

  1. 1

    Find the current week's article on si.com

    The ballot lives inside a weekly article at si.com/high-school/south-carolina, not on a permanent page. After the weekend's games, look for the newest "Player of the Week" post — the date in the headline is the only reliable signal, because older articles and their embedded polls stay live online. Voting in the wrong week's poll does not count toward the current race.

  2. 2

    Read the nominee list before clicking

    Each of the roughly 15 nominees is listed with the stat line that earned the nod: rushing yards, passing totals, tackles, the opponent and score. The descriptions are the only context the ballot provides, so scanning them takes less than two minutes and matters — you are choosing a name from up to 15, not two or three.

  3. 3

    Cast your vote and return through the week

    Tap or click your player in the embedded widget. No account or login is required. There is no posted per-period cap, so a supporter can return and vote again; the only hard boundary is Sunday at 11:59 p.m. Pacific, when the poll closes.

  4. 4

    Watch for the winner announcement in the next article

    SI announces the winner in the following week's poll article — the new ballot opens with a "Congratulations to last week's winner" line naming the player and school. There is no mid-week leaderboard and no published vote totals, so the final result is only visible once the next poll drops.

South Carolina High School Football Player of the Week — frequently asked questions

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

Legality & scope

What does the organizer say about automated voting?
SI's polls are designed for manual fan participation. Automated scripts, bots, and voting software run contrary to the ballot's intent and can result in votes being removed. A campaign that reaches more real people — classmates, alumni, boosters — builds a result that holds.

Process & delivery

How many nominees are on the ballot each week?
Roughly 15. The Oct 27, 2025 and Sept 22, 2025 polls each listed exactly 15 nominees; the Aug 26 and Sept 2, 2025 polls each had 15 as well. That is a larger field than many SI regional ballots — DFW typically runs six nominees. Fifteen names means the vote splits further, so winning margin is almost certainly a plurality rather than a majority, and tight races are the norm.
When does the poll close, and is that the same as other SI state polls?
Sunday at 11:59 p.m. Pacific — which is consistent with SI's other statewide football polls (unlike the Dallas / North Texas regional, which runs to Monday). For South Carolina supporters, Sunday is the deadline, and Saturday night into Sunday is where races are typically decided. The window from poll opening (usually early in the week) to Sunday night is the full campaign period.
Can the same player appear on the ballot in multiple weeks?
Yes. Grayson Rimpf of Camden appeared as a nominee in both the Aug 26 and Oct 27, 2025 polls — two separate ballot appearances in the same season. There is no confirmed rule preventing a prior-week winner from being re-nominated, and repeated appearances in the same season are documented.

Service quality

Where do vote-support services fit in for a 15-nominee ballot?
A 15-name field means the vote is fragmented from the start — winning typically requires a plurality across a divided ballot, not a majority. Closing that gap before Sunday night is the whole game, which is why <a href="/buy-sports-fan-poll-votes/">sports fan-poll vote support</a> is used in polls of exactly this structure.

Platform specifics

Are vote totals ever published for this poll?
No. SI's South Carolina football ballot does not display a running tally, a percentage breakdown, or a final vote count. The only public data point is the winner's name, announced in the next week's article. That makes this poll structurally different from the Dallas / North Texas ballot, where a 54.77% majority was on record — here, you cannot gauge your margin in real time or verify a win after the fact.
Is this the only statewide fan-vote football poll in South Carolina?
From public sources, yes. The SCHSL does not run a fan-vote Player of the Week program — its honors are editorial. MaxPreps South Carolina football coverage uses staff picks, not public voting. No newspaper-run regional fan polls were found for South Carolina football. The SI / SBLive poll is the only confirmed statewide public fan vote for South Carolina high school football.
Where can I find past South Carolina Player of the Week results?
Each winner is named in the following week's poll article on si.com/high-school/south-carolina. The results are not aggregated in a searchable archive — browsing past articles is the only public record. Because vote totals are never published, the back catalog shows names but no margins.

Custom orders

Who are the most recent confirmed South Carolina Player of the Week winners?
Four confirmed winners are on record from the 2024–25 season. Jamar Grissett of Irmo won the Week 0 poll (Aug 26, 2025 ballot); Drevon Dopson, also of Irmo, won the Week 1 poll (Sept 2, 2025 ballot) — the only confirmed back-to-back school in the data. Aiden Gibson of Woodruff won the week of Oct 20, 2025. Khalid Sherman of Loris won the week ending Dec 14, 2024. Four different programs (one repeated), across four different classifications and regions of the state.
How does Irmo winning two consecutive weeks change what we know about turnout here?
It tells you something about concentration. When one school puts two players on back-to-back ballots and wins both, it is not a coincidence — it reflects a community that stayed activated across consecutive weeks rather than a one-off mobilization. Irmo finished the 2025 season as 4A state champion (beating James F. Byrnes 35–32 in the final), so the wins tracked a team with real momentum. The practical point: sustained engagement across multiple weeks is possible, and at least one SC program demonstrated it.
Does the poll include SCISA private schools alongside SCHSL public programs?
Yes. SCISA (South Carolina Independent School Association) schools appear on the ballot alongside SCHSL public programs. Hammond School, Hilton Head Christian Academy, Beaufort Academy, Williamsburg Academy, and Northside Christian have all appeared as nominees. A private-school player and a 5A Division I public-school player can be on the same 15-name list in the same week — classification and association do not gate the ballot.
Can a player from a 1A or 2A school win against 5A nominees?
Confirmed. Khalid Sherman of Loris — a 2A school — won the Dec 14, 2024 poll. Woodruff, Aiden Gibson's school, competes at 3A. The ballot draws from all six classifications (5A DI, 5A DII, 4A, 3A, 2A, 1A), and the division gap does not determine outcomes — the size of the mobilized community does.
How are nominees chosen, and can I submit a player?
SI's South Carolina editorial team sets the field from the weekend's results. The submission pathway for this state's poll is not as publicly listed as some SI regions (the Dallas ballot posts a direct email), but community submissions and coaching staff outreach are the documented channels for getting a performance in front of editors before the ballot is built. A complete stat line with opponent and score, submitted by Saturday night, gives the best chance of making that week's 15-name list.
Does Dutch Fork appear on these ballots despite being the dominant team in the state?
Dutch Fork nominees do appear — Kyle Henry appeared as a nominee in the Oct 27, 2025 poll. Dutch Fork won four consecutive 5A DI state championships from 2022 through 2025 under coach Tom Knotts, and Summerville was the 2025 runner-up. The presence of the state's dominant program does not guarantee a win on this ballot; the Oct 27 poll ran 14 other nominees alongside Henry.
Where can I learn about other South Carolina high school contests?
The South Carolina state directory at <a href="/usa/south-carolina/">/usa/south-carolina/</a> lists the fan-vote contests we track for the state, and the national index at <a href="/usa/">/usa/</a> covers all 50 states. For recurring weekly polls like this one, the <a href="/buy-votes-online/">general vote-support page</a> explains how campaigns work across different platforms.

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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