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Bloomington Herald-Times Athlete of the Week: How Voting Works & How to Win

The Bloomington Herald-Times' IU Health-presented weekly fan vote for South- Central Indiana's top high school performance. Anyone can vote as often as they like, and 2026 polls have drawn thousands of votes per week across softball, baseball, and track.

Run by: Bloomington Herald-Times (Gannett) / IU Health Cadence: weekly Vote cap: No confirmed limit, organiser materials describe voting as often as fans like. Always confirm current rules on the live ballot.
Bloomington Herald-Times Athlete of the Week — fans voting online in the Indiana fan-vote poll

Disclosure: buyvotescontest.com is a vote-promotion service. This is independent, informational coverage of a public contest run by a third party; we are not affiliated with the organizer. Where our own services are relevant they are clearly labeled, and the contest's official rules always take precedence.

The gap between a 3,158-vote week and a 12,600-vote week

Three windows, three very different results. April's softball poll closed tight: 36.2% of 3,158 votes. Three weeks later, baseball pulled 12,600 (four times the turnout) and still only handed the winner 43.3%. Then track flipped the pattern entirely: a mid-size 4,242-vote field, but a blowout 64.5% share. That is the actual shape of this poll, and it is worth sitting with before assuming any single week predicts the next. Nobody publishes a running average here. There is no season-long standings page. What exists is three data points from spring 2026, and they contradict the easy assumption that more votes means a closer race. Baseball's crowd was bigger, and the finish was closer than track's smaller one. So turnout size and margin size move independently. A school community chasing a nomination should plan for either outcome, not just the flashy five-figure week. A useful way to read this: the poll rewards whichever community shows up repeatedly over the multi-day window, since the Herald-Times has confirmed there is no per-person cap. A single school with one clear nominee and a tight-knit alumni network can out-return a bigger district that splits its attention across several sports that same week. That dynamic, more than raw enrollment, decided track's 64.5%. For a look at how this compares to IndyStar's statewide girls basketball poll, the turnout math runs on the same open-window logic.

What the record does and doesn't tell us

Here's the honest gap. The Herald-Times publishes each week's final tally in its own sports coverage, but it does not maintain a standalone archive of past winners. Anyone researching this poll before entering a nomination is working from whatever weeks happen to be indexed and dated on heraldtimesonline.com at the time. That's a real limit, not a minor caveat: a program running since the 2020s only has three confirmed 2026 data points documented here. IU Health presents the program; the Herald-Times' Gannett-owned sports desk builds the actual ballot from games it covers across Monroe County, Owen County, and Greene County. Confirmed 2026 windows:
Confirmed 2026 Bloomington Herald-Times Athlete of the Week results
WindowSportTotal votesWinning share
April 20-25Softball3,15836.2%
May 4-9Baseball12,60043.3%
May 11-16Track and field4,24264.5%
Notice the program doesn't run one fixed weekly slot year-round. It follows each sport's own spring calendar, which is why the covered activity changes month to month rather than staying constant. For the statewide picture this regional program sits inside, the Indiana High School Athlete of the Week guide covers turnout patterns across the rest of the state, and the Indiana High School Player of the Year program covers the season-long counterpart to this weekly format.

How this differs from an SI-network poll, and what that means for turnout

Most Athlete of the Week programs nationally run through the Sports Illustrated / SBLive network, with a shared voting widget and shared rulebook across states. This one doesn't. It's a Gannett paper's own in-house poll, presented by a regional hospital system, covering one metro area rather than a whole state's classification ladder. That distinction matters for anyone comparing turnout numbers across programs. An SI-network statewide poll pulls from hundreds of schools and multiple classifications competing on one ballot; a single lopsided week there can reflect one huge school's fan base overwhelming a small one. Bloomington's ballot, by contrast, draws only from Monroe County city schools, Bloomington South, Bloomington North, Edgewood, plus neighboring Owen Valley and Eastern Greene. Fewer schools in the pool means a mobilized community here has an outsized shot at a five-figure baseball week or a 64.5% track blowout, regardless of enrollment size. No account, login, or subscription gates participation, and the organiser confirms there's no vote cap per person. Award-poll vote support is built for exactly this kind of open, uncapped multi-day window, where sustained return visits (not one big share) are what separates a 3,158-vote week from a 12,600-vote one. The real votes guide is worth reading alongside it for staying inside whatever rules the live ballot states that week, and get more votes online covers the same multi-day mobilization approach in general terms.

What this means for a Monroe County nomination

So what should a school community actually expect? Not a fixed number. Plan for a range: low thousands if the covered sport is niche that week, five figures if it's baseball or another high-interest sport pulling from a bigger roster pool. The track week is the reminder that a smaller crowd can still deliver a decisive, well-organised win, 64.5% on 4,242 votes beat baseball's 43.3% on triple the turnout. Because the ballot spans a Bloomington city school and a rural Owen or Greene County program in the same pool, the same principle that plays out in bigger state tournaments shows up here at a metro scale: a tight, coordinated network beats a bigger but distracted one. Browse the Indiana fan-vote hub for other in-state weekly polls running a similar format, or start with the buy votes online overview and the full USA fan-vote directory if this is the first program a school community has campaigned for.

Vote totals and winning percentages last confirmed for the April-May 2026 spring season; check heraldtimesonline.com for the current week's live ballot before voting.

How to vote in Bloomington Herald-Times Athlete of the Week

  1. 1

    Find the current week's ballot at heraldtimesonline.com

    The IU Health-presented Athlete of the Week poll runs during each in-season sport window and is published on the Herald-Times' sports section. Because the ballot changes weekly, check the publication date before voting, the active poll is the one posted for the current week.

  2. 2

    Review the nominated performance and school

    Each week's ballot lists the nominated performance by school, without naming individual competitors in any outside summary. The Herald-Times article itself carries the full stat context editors used to build that week's field, which is useful before deciding how to frame outreach to a school community.

  3. 3

    Cast your vote in the open window

    Vote for the nominated performance you want to see win. The organiser has confirmed that fans may vote as often as they like during the open window, which is why confirmed 2026 weeks have drawn vote totals from roughly 3,150 to more than 12,600.

  4. 4

    Watch the close of the voting window

    Each week's poll runs on its own schedule tied to that week's games; always confirm the exact close time on the live ballot rather than assuming a fixed day, since the window can shift with the sport's schedule.

Bloomington Herald-Times Athlete of the Week — frequently asked questions

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

Process & delivery

How does this poll's uncapped format compare to a one-vote-per-device contest?
Where a poll limits one ballot per device, turnout tracks unique visitors. Here, the organiser confirms fans may vote as often as they like, so a 3,158-vote week and a 12,600-vote week both reflect repeat visits from a mobilised community rather than a fixed pool of voters showing up once.
Where do results from earlier weeks get published?
The Herald-Times does not keep a standalone results archive separate from its regular sports coverage. A specific week's outcome shows up in a follow-up article dated shortly after that week's window closes, so searching heraldtimesonline.com by date is the practical way to find it.
Who picks which performance gets nominated each week?
The Herald-Times sports desk selects the nominee from games it already covered that week across Monroe County and the surrounding counties, Owen and Greene among them, using the same reporting that ran in the paper's own game coverage.

Platform specifics

Is this Herald-Times poll affiliated with the IHSAA?
No. The Indiana High School Athletic Association runs official state tournaments, seeding, and eligibility, and has no connection to this program. The Herald-Times poll is an independent Gannett media property; a win here carries no bearing on IHSAA standings.
Why doesn't this guide name the athletes who won each week?
The confirmed vote totals and percentages above come straight from Herald-Times reporting, but this guide withholds individual athlete names as a standing policy on programmatic pages covering high school competitors. The newspaper's own articles name the nominated performers directly.
Does IU Health influence who wins?
IU Health is the confirmed presenting sponsor, funding the program's branding, but the vote itself is a public tally on the Herald-Times site. Nothing in the organiser's materials suggests sponsor involvement in nominee selection or in counting votes.

Custom orders

Why did the baseball week pull four times the votes of the softball week?
Turnout swung from 3,158 votes in the April 20-25 softball window to 12,600 in the May 4-9 baseball window, a 4x gap with no cap on either poll. The most likely driver is roster size and community reach on the baseball side that week, not a rule change, since the voting mechanism stayed identical across both windows.
Does a high vote count mean a close race?
Not necessarily. The 12,600-vote baseball week ended 43.3% to the winner, a tighter percentage margin than the 4,242-vote track week, which closed at 64.5%. Raw turnout and margin move independently here, a smaller field mobilised more decisively than a larger one.
What sports has the 2026 program covered so far?
Three confirmed windows: softball (April 20-25), baseball (May 4-9), and track and field (May 11-16). Each follows that sport's own in-season calendar, so the covered sport rotates through the spring rather than sitting on one fixed weekly category.

Sources

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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