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California High School Boys Basketball Player of the Week: How Voting Works & How to Win

The High School on SI (SBLive) statewide fan vote for the top California boys basketball performance of the week. Editors at si.com set a field of roughly 20 nominees, anyone can vote with no account, and the ballot closes Sunday at 11:59 p.m. Pacific — the same deadline that drives CIF postseason weeks into overnight surges.

Run by: High School on SI / SBLive Sports Cadence: weekly Vote cap: Unlimited manual votes — no per-period limit stated
Thematic photo for California High School Boys Basketball Player of the Week showing California High School Boys Basketball Player of the Week voting workflow

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The geography of this ballot: Plumas County to Orange County on one list

Start with the March 4, 2025 ballot and read the schools, not the names. Dalton Bentz and Owen Joseph played for Plumas Charter — a small independent school in the Sierra Nevada foothills where the county seat has fewer than 2,000 residents. Magnus Berg and Connor Sheridan played for Portola in Irvine, a CIF-SS program inside Orange County's tech corridor. Fernando Lopez came from Point Arena, a school of roughly 100 students on the Mendocino coast. Andrew Lim and Justin Wang came from Basis Independent Silicon Valley, a private school in San Jose with an internationally sourced student body and parent networks that extend across multiple campuses and grade levels.

That span is the structural fact. The statewide scope puts three distinct climate zones, five CIF sections, and enrollment ranges from 80 to 4,000 onto a single week's ballot.

The community mobilization mechanics differ at every point on that map. Plumas Charter is centralized — geographically close, socially dense, reachable through a handful of direct connections. Portola in Irvine sits inside a highly networked suburban community where families circulate information through club sports, HOA channels, and school apps. Basis Independent draws from a diaspora of families spread across the South Bay who share information in ways that cross campuses and grade levels simultaneously. A campaign that works for one of those schools will structurally underperform for the others.

Connor Sheridan, 24 candidates, and what a large field changes

Twenty-four names. That is the field Connor Sheridan won against on January 29, 2025 — and that number tells you more about how this poll works than any other single data point.

In a 6-name football poll, a runner-up might finish with 25 percent of the vote, and a winner who clears 40 percent has effectively dominated the field. In a 24-name basketball ballot, the math looks completely different: the runner-up might finish with 8 or 9 percent, and a winner can claim a plurality while representing a minority of all votes cast — because the rest of the field fragments into small individual piles while one school's supporters consolidate behind a single name. That is how you win a 24-candidate ballot without a majority. You do not need to beat everyone; you need to be the one school whose fans actually show up while the rest assume someone else will.

Other confirmed 2024-25 winners — Kaleb Smith of Damien (La Verne), Aidan Braccia of Sacred Heart Prep (Atherton), Nikhil Narasimhan of Lynbrook, Orion Tomlinson of Fresno Christian, Karson Seamen of Los Molinos, Justin White of Mission Hills, Cameron Saldaña of Aptos — spread across CIF-SS private schools, Bay Area independents, NorCal public programs, and a Central Valley school. No single region dominates the winners list.

That is worth repeating. No single region dominates. Not SoCal. Not the Bay Area. The field is genuinely open.

NorCal in January, statewide by March — and why the label matters

One operational detail separates the California boys basketball poll from the football and softball versions: the geographic scope changes mid-season, and if you miss that shift, you can mobilize a campaign for a ballot your player is not even on.

January polls are branded "Northern California" and draw nominees from NorCal CIF sections — Sac-Joaquin, North Coast, Central Coast, Central, Northern, San Francisco, Oakland. By late February the ballot expands and the title shifts to "California." For a SoCal program, this matters two ways. First, if a Damien or Mission Hills player posts a strong January week, that performance may not appear on a ballot currently scoped to NorCal sections. Second, when the scope expands, NorCal fans who have been voting consistently for NorCal nominees all January will encounter new SoCal entries they have no prior attachment to — which can give a well-organized SoCal community a structural opening in February that it does not have in January.

PeriodLabelScopeTypical field size
December–JanuaryNorthern CaliforniaNorCal CIF sections~20–24 nominees
February–MarchCaliforniaAll CIF sections~19–24 nominees

The Sunday 11:59 p.m. Pacific close holds across both phases. What changes is who is eligible to appear, not when the ballot ends.

Running a campaign when the field has twenty names

A twenty-name ballot rewards reach, not intensity. One household voting repeatedly through Sunday contributes far less than fifty people each voting a handful of times — the math of a large, scattered field means width matters more than depth in your first push.

The California boys basketball community activates through very different network topologies depending on where the school sits. Bay Area private schools like Sacred Heart Prep and Basis Independent circulate through parent email lists and school-app channels where families are accustomed to acting on notifications quickly. NorCal small-school programs like Plumas Charter and Los Molinos run through tightly connected community channels where a single team group chat reaches a meaningful fraction of the whole fan base in minutes. SoCal CIF-SS programs like Portola and Damien carry larger absolute networks spread across club teams, youth leagues, and multiple campuses, which means any single message reaches a subset and must be repeated across those channels to move the needle — a structural difference from the small-school situation that requires more coordination, not more enthusiasm.

Getting onto the ballot comes first. Email [email protected] with stat line, opponent, score, position, and grade, or tag @sbliveca on X or Instagram. Saturday night or early Sunday morning is the practical cutoff. Once the ballot is live, campaigns that remind their network on Saturday and again Sunday morning consistently outperform those that treat Friday as the deadline.

The how-to guide covers how recurring fan-vote polls work across their weekly cadence. For a poll this open and uncapped, structured vote-support exists as a way to add concentrated volume into a field where natural turnout scatters across 20 nominees. If your player competes in a different sport — or if the season falls outside the December-to-March boys basketball window — the California contest directory lists the other High School on SI fan-vote polls active in the state.

How to vote in California High School Boys Basketball Player of the Week

  1. 1

    Find the current week's ballot article

    The poll is embedded inside a dated article on si.com, not a permanent standalone page. Navigate to si.com/high-school/california/boys-basketball/ athlete-of-the-week and open the most recent post — earlier weeks' ballots stay live online, so confirm the date before voting on what you think is the live race.

  2. 2

    Scan the nominee list — all ~20 names are visible before you commit

    Unlike some polls that show only a few featured names, the California boys basketball ballot typically lists the full field of roughly 20 nominees in one scrollable widget. Each entry shows the player's name, school, position, and the stat line that earned the nod. Read through before selecting — the field often spans NorCal small independents and SoCal CIF-SS powers on the same ballot.

  3. 3

    Cast your vote and return through the week

    Tap your player's name in the embedded widget. The poll invites repeat voting — a supporter can return daily, or more often, until Sunday night's close. The constraint is the Sunday 11:59 p.m. Pacific deadline, not a per-visit cap.

  4. 4

    Watch for the NorCal-to-statewide transition

    Early-season polls (January) are labeled "Northern California" and draw nominees primarily from NorCal sections. By February the scope broadens and the label shifts to "California." If your player is at a SoCal school, confirm the current ballot's geographic scope before mobilizing, since some January ballots exclude the CIF Southern Section entirely.

California High School Boys 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 voting?
High School on SI explicitly prohibits automated scripts and macros for this poll. The stated consequence is disqualification of the athlete — not just vote removal, but removal of the nominee entirely. The policy frames the competition as "a fun, lighthearted way for fans to show support," which means the only approach that survives scrutiny is reaching more real people before Sunday night.

Process & delivery

When does the ballot close?
Sunday at 11:59 p.m. Pacific. That deadline holds for both the NorCal-scoped early-season polls and the statewide late-season ballots — it is consistent across the 2024-25 season. The California boys basketball close aligns with the California girls basketball POTW but differs from the Dallas / North Texas football poll, which runs a day longer and closes Monday.
Is there a vote cap on this poll?
High School on SI states it does not set limits on how many times a fan can vote during the competition. The Sunday close is the only hard boundary. That policy is consistent across the California SI polls this organizer runs — football, softball, baseball, and both basketball genders use the same unlimited-manual mechanics, unlike some regional outlets in other states that cap at once per day.
How are nominees chosen, and can I suggest a player?
SI's California editors compile the field from the week's results. Fans and coaches can submit nominations by emailing [email protected] or tagging @sbliveca on X or Instagram. A submission that includes the full stat line, the opponent, the score, and the player's grade and position has the best chance of making the ballot before it is set Sunday morning.

Service quality

How do vote-support services fit into a 20-nominee field like this?
A ballot with 20 nominees dilutes the natural turnout from any single school's network, because votes scatter across the full field. Services like <a href="/buy-sports-fan-poll-votes/">sports fan-poll vote support</a> exist precisely for open, uncapped polls where concentrated volume from one source can shift a fragmented race. The Sunday close gives a defined window to work within.

Platform specifics

Does the ballot cover all of California, or is it split by region?
Both. Early-season polls (typically January) are branded "Northern California" and draw nominees from NorCal CIF sections. By February, and through the postseason, the ballot expands to a full statewide scope labeled "California." The March 4 poll had players from Plumas Charter (Plumas County, far NorCal), Pacific Grove (Central Coast), Point Arena (Mendocino County), and Sherman Oaks (Los Angeles) on the same list. A SoCal school's fans should confirm the current week's geographic label before starting a campaign.
Is this the same poll as the Northern California or Southern California Athlete of the Week?
No. High School on SI runs several California basketball polls. This boys basketball POTW is sport-specific and limited to boys basketball. Separately, there is a gender-neutral NorCal multi-sport Athlete of the Week and a SoCal multi-sport Athlete of the Week — those cover all sports and all genders. A boys basketball player could appear on either poll in a given week but they are editorially separate ballots.

Custom orders

Who is the most recent confirmed California boys basketball Player of the Week?
Connor Sheridan of Portola, a junior forward in Irvine, won the Northern California Boys Basketball Athlete of the Week for the week of January 29, 2025. He beat 24 candidates — a notably large field for a single-sport weekly poll. Other confirmed winners from the 2024-25 season include Kaleb Smith of Damien (La Verne), Aidan Braccia of Sacred Heart Prep (Atherton), Nikhil Narasimhan of Lynbrook, Orion Tomlinson of Fresno Christian, Karson Seamen of Los Molinos, Justin White of Mission Hills, and Cameron Saldaña of Aptos.
How many nominees are on a typical California boys basketball ballot?
The confirmed March 4, 2025 ballot listed 19 nominees from schools across both NorCal and SoCal sections. The January 29 poll that Connor Sheridan won had 24 candidates. The field is meaningfully larger than the 6-to-10-name ballots common in football or baseball POTW polls — a wider field means vote concentration matters more, not less.
Can a small-school player from a town of a few hundred actually win this statewide poll?
The March 4 ballot makes that case directly. Fernando Lopez of Point Arena — a school in Mendocino County with roughly 100 students — was on the same list as nominees from Portola (Irvine, Orange County) and Basis Independent Silicon Valley. Karson Seamen of Los Molinos, another small NorCal school, is a confirmed past winner. A tight-knit small-school community that moves together can out-vote a larger school's more dispersed fan base.
Do private schools compete on the same ballot as public CIF programs?
Yes. Sacred Heart Prep (Atherton) and Basis Independent Silicon Valley are both private schools with confirmed nominees on the March 4 ballot, alongside public programs from CIF-NCS, CIF-SS, and smaller sections. CIF classification and public/private status do not gate who appears — any California high school player is eligible based on performance.
What does it take to win — how large are typical vote totals?
High School on SI does not publish raw vote counts for this poll; only winners are announced. The closest indicator is the 24-candidate field that Connor Sheridan won at the end of January 2025 — a large field means votes scatter more, so a winner typically earns a plurality rather than a majority. Concentrated turnout from one school's network is the deciding variable, not any fixed threshold.
Where can I find past California boys basketball winners?
The hub page at si.com/high-school/california/boys-basketball/athlete-of-the-week lists recent winners. Each week's ballot article stays live after the poll closes, so browsing archived posts is the main public record. There is no aggregated leaderboard or season-long standings published by the organizer.
Can a player be nominated who plays for a school not in a major CIF section?
Yes. Basis Independent Silicon Valley — an independent private school — had two nominees on the March 4 ballot (Andrew Lim, a sophomore, and Justin Wang, a senior). The ballot does not restrict to CIF-enrolled programs; any California high school with verified game results is eligible for consideration.

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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