Case Study: Winning an Email-Verified Grant Contest Vote
How a community arts organization used a structured two-tranche vote strategy to win an email-verified $25,000 grant contest — with campaign decisions documented.
Read more →Statewide postseason fan poll on High School on SI covering all GHSA classifications during the November-December playoff run; voting is uncapped and closes Sunday 11:59 p.m. PT. During the regular season, Georgia runs separate North and South regional polls — this statewide ballot exists only in the postseason.
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Brooks Goodman of Blessed Trinity won the Georgia Playoff Player of the Week on the strength of a private-school passing game — 174 yards, two touchdowns — while competing on the same ballot as public 6A programs with larger enrollment and broader name recognition. That result is the clearest signal about what this particular poll is: a statewide ballot where the only currency is how fast a community moves, not how many people it theoretically contains. To understand why Goodman could win it, you need to know which ballot this is and why it exists only in November and December.
High School on SI runs three distinct Georgia football ballots that rotate on the calendar. They are not interchangeable — scope, field, and competitive dynamics change when the postseason begins.
| Poll | Active window | Geographic scope | Closes |
|---|---|---|---|
| North Georgia POTW | Aug – early Nov (regular season) | North Georgia nominees only | Sunday 11:59 p.m. PT |
| South Georgia POTW | Aug – early Nov (regular season) | South Georgia nominees only | Sunday 11:59 p.m. PT |
| Playoff POTW (this page) | Mid-Nov – mid-Dec (postseason only) | All GHSA classifications, statewide | Sunday 11:59 p.m. PT |
The close time is the same across all three — Sunday 11:59 p.m. Pacific, which is 2:59 a.m. Eastern Monday. What changes in November is the field. A Buford nominee in the regular season competes against North Georgia peers; the same Buford player in the playoffs shares a ballot with Toombs County, Thomson, and Langston Hughes. The competitive landscape shifts more than the mechanics do.
The structural distinction that makes the playoff poll different is that it is the only active Georgia football ballot during the postseason. When the North and South polls pause in November, the statewide ballot is the entire Georgia fan-vote ecosystem for football until the state championships close out in December. There is no parallel Georgia poll splitting the vote or the attention.
The December 9, 2024 ballot is four nominees from four genuinely different Georgias:
| Nominee | School | Region / Context | Performance |
|---|---|---|---|
| CJ Wiley | Milton Eagles | 6A, North Fulton suburbs | WR: 165 yds, 3 TDs |
| Christian Langford | Langston Hughes Panthers | 6A, Fairburn / South Fulton | QB: 222 yds, 4 passing TDs + rush TD |
| TJ Stanley | Toombs County Bulldogs | Smaller class, Southeast GA rural | QB: 152 pass yds + 97 rush yds, 4 TDs |
| Kel'Von Scott | Burke County Bears | East Georgia, Augusta corridor | RB: 169 yds + 99-yd kickoff return TD |
Milton and Langston Hughes are both 6A programs, but they draw from neighborhoods with essentially no social overlap. Milton is in North Fulton, where a Friday night draws a crowd that skews toward established suburban networks — PTAs, booster emails, organized alumni chapters. Langston Hughes is in Fairburn in South Fulton, with a community infrastructure rooted in historically Black institutions, church networks, and a fanbase that activates hard when one of its own is recognized. Two 6A schools on the same ballot can reach entirely different voting populations through entirely different channels.
Toombs County, from Vidalia in Southeast Georgia, brings the smallest geographic footprint of the four. TJ Stanley's dual-threat line — 152 passing yards, 97 rushing yards, four total touchdowns — is the kind of stat that earns a playoff nomination regardless of classification. The question for Toombs County supporters is whether a tight-knit rural community in a region where Bulldogs football is the dominant Friday event can convert quickly enough on a poll that closes the following Sunday. That community does not have the raw headcount of a 6A suburb, but it may have the activation speed one does not.
And Brooks Goodman of Blessed Trinity won the previous week. A private-school program from Roswell, drawing from a Catholic alumni network spread across North Metro Atlanta, edged out whatever public-school nominees it faced. That result confirms the rule the December 9 ballot illustrates: classification and enrollment do not gate the fan vote. The community that moves fastest in a Sunday window wins it.
The two confirmed 2024 playoff weeks together span the semifinal and championship rounds of the GHSA postseason. The November 25 ballot had five nominees; the December 9 ballot had four. That contraction tracks with how the GHSA brackets work — fewer teams are alive in December, so fewer standout performances are available to nominate.
The November 25 field captures a semifinal week when all classifications still have multiple teams alive. Anthony Jeffery of Thomson ran for 266 yards and four touchdowns — the highest single-game rushing total among confirmed nominees in both documented weeks. Travis Burgess of Grayson provided the most complete dual-threat line: 196 passing yards, three touchdown passes, 120 rushing yards, and a fourth score. Eli Lewis of Valdosta had won the prior week, meaning the Wildcats appeared on consecutive ballots — one as champion, one as the backdrop against which the new field was introduced.
What neither ballot documents is raw vote totals or winning percentages. High School on SI does not publish the final count for Georgia's playoff poll the way some outlets do — only winning margins that appear in the write-up if the editor includes them. The absence of public totals means campaigns here are running blind on scale: there is no prior-week number to beat, no threshold to plan around. The only confirmed ceiling is the Sunday close.
The voting mechanics for the playoff ballot are identical to the regular-season North and South polls: no account, no login, no per-device cap, closes Sunday 11:59 p.m. Pacific. The ballot is embedded in an article at si.com/high-school/georgia, not on a standalone permanent URL. That means finding the correct week's ballot requires locating the right article — older closed polls stay online and look similar, so checking the publish date before voting is the single most common friction point.
| Mechanic | Detail |
|---|---|
| Vote cap | Uncapped — no per-device or per-hour restriction posted |
| Closes | Sunday 11:59 p.m. Pacific (2:59 a.m. Eastern Monday) |
| Account required | No — vote directly in the embedded widget |
| Winner announced | Named at the top of the following week's ballot article |
| Automated votes | Flagged and removed by organizer |
| Official GHSA award | No — fan recognition only; GHSA does not administer this poll |
One mechanic that differs from how a team might approach this poll versus a regional regular-season ballot: during the regular season, a North Georgia community competes only against other North Georgia nominees, so a concentrated local effort can dominate a smaller field. On the statewide playoff ballot, that same community effort faces nominees whose communities may be equally motivated — every team still alive in December believes it can win the state title, and that belief converts into vote mobilization in ways regular-season ballots do not always see. For context on how other states handle the regional-vs-statewide structure differently, the national contest directory lists comparable fan-vote polls by state.
A Toombs County campaign and a Langston Hughes campaign are not the same operation, and treating them identically is the most common planning error.
Langston Hughes draws from South Fulton County, a majority-Black community in the Atlanta metro with deep ties to historically Black colleges, faith institutions, and a network of alumni who have settled across the metro but maintain strong school identity. Christian Langford's 222-yard, four-touchdown passing performance in the December 9 ballot is the kind of stat line that travels fast in those networks — the play is visually compelling, the name is known, and the school community is organized. The work there is early distribution: get the ballot link into the right group chats on Monday when the poll publishes, and the Sunday close takes care of itself.
Toombs County's path is different. Vidalia is not in the Atlanta media market. The Bulldog faithful are geographically concentrated in Southeast Georgia — which is a structural advantage for speed of activation but a disadvantage for raw headcount. The poll link has to find its way to former players who have moved to Savannah, Macon, or Jacksonville, and that requires a more deliberate network-mapping effort than a metro school needs. Thursday and Friday — the days when the Friday game is already in people's minds — are when those reach-out efforts land best for a rural community.
For campaigns where organic reach falls short of what the statewide field demands, vote-support campaigns exist for this type of weekly postseason ballot. More about how recurring fan votes work in general is at the how-to guide, and the full Georgia contest landscape is at the Georgia directory.
The poll lives inside an article at si.com/high-school/georgia, not on a permanent standalone page. Look for the post titled with the current playoff week — the semifinal or quarterfinal date — and confirm the publish date before voting, because prior weeks' closed polls remain online and look similar.
SI lists each candidate with the performance that earned the nomination: passing yardage, rushing totals, touchdown count, the opponent. On a statewide playoff ballot where Toombs County and Grayson can share the same list, those lines are the only context for comparing nominees across vastly different classification sizes.
Click your nominee in the embedded widget. The hard stop is Sunday at 11:59 p.m. Pacific, which is 2:59 a.m. Monday Eastern — Georgia-based voters on Eastern time should plan their final push for Sunday evening, not Monday morning. You can return to vote again until that close.
Georgia voters coordinating on Eastern time lose nearly three hours compared to the stated 11:59 p.m. Pacific close. A Langston Hughes booster planning a "Monday morning push" has already missed the poll by about three hours; a Toombs County supporter sending the link on Sunday evening still makes it. Plan your final distribution for Sunday afternoon to evening, not overnight.
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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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