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

The High School on SI / SBLive statewide fan vote for Maryland's best prep football offensive performance each week. Since 2025, SI runs two separate weekly ballots — offensive and defensive — where one combined poll ran in 2024. Both close Sunday at 11:59 p.m. Pacific; anyone can vote with no account and no stated per-person cap.

Run by: High School on SI / SBLive Sports Cadence: weekly Vote cap: No stated per-person limit; 2024 poll explicitly allowed unlimited votes
Thematic photo for Maryland High School Football Player of the Week showing Maryland High School Football Player of the Week voting workflow

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The thing most Maryland voters don't know — this became two polls in 2025

The most practically useful fact about SI's Maryland football Player of the Week vote is structural, not statistical: it changed formats between 2024 and 2025. In 2024, one combined poll ran each week, putting offensive and defensive nominees on the same ballot. Beginning in the 2025 season, SI split them into two independent weekly votes — a separate offensive ballot and a separate defensive ballot, each with its own URL, its own nominee field, and its own vote count.

That matters for two reasons. First, a supporter searching for "Maryland football player of the week" and landing on the defensive poll when their player is on the offensive one has voted on the wrong ballot — and the Sunday close does not offer much time to recover. Second, a performance that would have competed against both quarterbacks and linebackers in 2024 now competes only against players at the same positional category, which changes what the field looks like in any given week.

The 2024 archive URL — "vote-maryland-high-school-football-player-of-the-week" — and the 2025 URLs — one for offensive, one for defensive — are different enough that bookmarks and old links do not carry over. Check the date and the "offensive" or "defensive" label in the article title before you vote.

What the confirmed winners actually show about this poll

Three offensive patterns emerge from the 2025 results on record. The first is that passing performances dominate nominations: Ben Raines (South River, 260 yards, 5 TDs), Amir Elder (Oxon Hill, 311 yards, 5 TDs), Ty Bussard (Severn School, multiple weeks), Colton Starlings (Queen Anne's County, 335 yards, 4 TDs), and Tyler Bell (Atholton, 258 yards, 3 TDs plus rushing) all made it on quarterback lines. Derek Toney's editorial lens for offensive nominations skews aerial.

The second is that private schools are genuinely in the mix. Ty Bussard of Severn School — which plays under MIAA, not MPSSAA — won at least twice in the 2025 season. A prep-school quarterback from the Baltimore private-school circuit competed on the same weekly ballot as public-school nominees from all six MPSSAA classes. The ballot does not ask what association a player's school belongs to.

The third is the exception that proves the first two: Abi Archibong of Fallston. A freshman running back with 25 carries, 301 yards, and five touchdowns in a playoff week earned a nomination alongside a field of senior quarterbacks each throwing for five scores. That is what a sufficiently large rushing line can do — it earns a spot even when the editorial tilt is toward the passing game.

WinnerSchoolKey stat lineWeek
Ben RainesSouth River10-of-13, 260 yds, 5 TDsNov. 11
Amir ElderOxon Hill10-of-14, 311 yds, 5 TDsNov. 17
Ty BussardSevern School (MIAA)Multiple wins; exact weeks cited in Oct.–Nov. pollsMultiple

A 335-yard, four-TD game (Starlings, Queen Anne's County) did not win on the Nov. 11 ballot. Neither did 25 carries and five touchdowns from Archibong. Both Raines and Elder threw for five scores each — the distinction was likely turnout, not the stat line. This poll is not decided by which performance was objectively better; it is decided by which school's community moved people to si.com by Sunday night.

The Maryland football landscape that arrives on one weekly ballot

Maryland's public programs run through six MPSSAA enrollment tiers. At the top sits Class 4A, where Quince Orchard in Gaithersburg built an 87-3 record from 2018 through the 2025 season and took seven total state titles. At the other end is Class 1A, where Patuxent won the 2025 championship 35-28 over Fort Hill — a program that had been reaching for a fifth consecutive 1A crown. In between: Linganore, a Class 3A school in Frederick County that went undefeated in 2025 for the first program's first perfect season since 2009; Huntingtown, a 2A program that claimed its first-ever state title 24-21 over Northern-Calvert; and Paul Laurence Dunbar in Baltimore, a 2A/1A program with 13 state titles and counting.

None of those classifications gate the weekly fan ballot. A Paul Laurence Dunbar nominee competes against a Quince Orchard nominee and a Severn School nominee on the same Sunday-closing poll. What the classification landscape actually explains is community structure: a school like Dunbar carries a Baltimore city identity and an alumni network rooted in one of the state's most football-serious communities. A school like Patuxent or Fort Hill draws from rural Southern and Western Maryland, where the program is the center of a smaller town's weekly social calendar during football season. Neither network is inherently larger than the other in fan-vote terms — the question is which one mobilizes faster on a given Sunday.

For a campaign built around a nominee from outside the top classes, that structure is the opportunity. A Fallston freshman earning a nomination is a smaller school's moment — and smaller schools often have more centralized communication chains. One well-timed post from the team's own accounts, forwarded through a tight booster network, reaches a higher percentage of the total community than the same effort from a 4A school's diffuse alumni base. See the broader Maryland contest landscape at /usa/maryland/ or the national directory at /usa/.

Running a Sunday campaign — what actually decides a Maryland week

Maryland's SI poll closes Sunday, not Monday. That single fact shapes everything about how a campaign runs here. The effective window is roughly 36 hours: from when the ballot posts Sunday morning (after Saturday night's games have been compiled by Derek Toney) until 11:59 p.m. Pacific Sunday night. There is no Monday to lean on. A booster group that waits until Monday morning has already lost.

The most common failure mode is front-loading. A wave of votes on Saturday evening — if the poll is already live — followed by silence through Sunday afternoon is a losing pattern, because the opposition's Sunday push goes unanswered. The decisive push is Sunday afternoon through evening, after fans are home from weekend activities and checking phones. Reminders at noon, at 3 p.m., and after dinner reach voters at the moments they are most likely to actually click through.

Because this is an uncapped ballot decided purely by turnout, the contest is reach, not repetition. Widening the circle — getting the player's own friend group involved, reaching the school's alumni association, putting the link in the parent chat before Sunday evening — produces more votes than any single supporter returning to the same device. For teams whose organic networks do not reach far enough before Sunday night, structured vote-support campaigns are built for exactly this kind of Sunday-deadline, open-ballot format. For context on how weekly fan polls work more broadly, the how-to guide covers the recurring cadence.

How to vote in Maryland High School Football Player of the Week

  1. 1

    Find the current week's SI article for Maryland

    The poll is embedded inside a dated article on si.com/high-school/maryland, not on a standalone page. After the weekend's games, look for the newest "Offensive Player of the Week" post — the URL includes the date and a unique article ID, so older closed polls look nearly identical to the live one. Check the date before voting.

  2. 2

    Review the stat lines in the article body

    Each nominee's performance is summarized in the article itself — rushing and passing totals, receiving yards, the opponent and score. SI's Maryland editor Derek Toney writes these up; the stat lines are the only place the nominees are explained, so reading them first shows you who you are voting for.

  3. 3

    Click your nominee in the embedded poll widget

    The poll widget sits inside the article. Tap or click your player's name; no login or account is required. The 2024 poll explicitly invited voters to vote as often as they wish, and the 2025 format states no per-person limit. Sunday at 11:59 p.m. PT is the hard close.

  4. 4

    Return before Sunday night — that is when races close

    Unlike some regional SI polls that run to Monday, Maryland closes Sunday night. The closing window runs Saturday evening through Sunday afternoon and evening — whoever keeps mobilizing through Sunday dinner has the advantage. A single large push on Saturday morning that goes quiet before Sunday night leaves votes on the table.

Maryland High School Football 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 bots or automated voting tools?
SI's polls are designed for manual fan engagement. Automated scripts, bots, and vote macros run against the platform's intended use and risk having votes discarded. The result that holds up is the one built by reaching more real people — which is the opposite of running one device on a loop.

Process & delivery

Why does the Maryland poll close Sunday when some other SI regional polls close Monday?
High School on SI sets its close day by market. Maryland's offensive and defensive polls both close Sunday at 11:59 p.m. Pacific — the same day as SI's statewide Texas offensive and defensive polls, but a full day earlier than the SI Dallas / North Texas regional ballot, which closes Monday. For a Maryland campaign, Sunday evening is not wind-down time; it is the final sprint.
Is there a vote cap on Maryland's SI poll?
No stated per-person limit appears on the 2025 polls. The 2024 combined Maryland poll explicitly used the phrase "vote as often as you wish." The 2025 format shows no CAPTCHA gate and no per-period restriction in the confirmed fetched polls. Sunday at 11:59 p.m. Pacific is the only hard limit.

Service quality

Where do vote-support services fit in for a poll like this?
Maryland's SI poll is open to all, uncapped, and decided entirely by turnout — no committee, no editorial override after the Sunday close. Services such as <a href="/buy-sports-fan-poll-votes/">sports fan-poll vote support</a> exist for exactly this structure: weekly polls where the ballot is public and the outcome is purely a function of how many real votes arrive before the deadline.

Platform specifics

When did SI start running two separate polls instead of one?
In 2024, SI ran a single combined Maryland football Player of the Week ballot that mixed offensive and defensive nominees. Beginning with the 2025 season, the format split into two independent weekly votes: one exclusively for offensive performers and one for defensive. A player nominated for an exceptional defensive game now runs on a separate ballot, not against quarterbacks and running backs.
How do you find a past week's Maryland poll after it closes?
Closed poll articles remain live on si.com/high-school/maryland with their original URLs. Each article URL includes a date string and unique article ID, so searching for "maryland high school football offensive player of the week" plus the date returns prior weeks. The totals and percentages are not published separately — the article page is the only record.

Targeting & customisation

How does Maryland's six-class MPSSAA structure affect who ends up on the ballot?
MPSSAA runs six enrollment tiers in 2025 — from Class 4A (largest public schools, including Quince Orchard in Gaithersburg, which went 87-3 from 2018 through 2025) down to Class 1A. The fan-vote ballot draws across all six, plus private schools outside MPSSAA entirely. The 2025 1A champion Patuxent and the powerhouse 2A/1A program Paul Laurence Dunbar — Maryland's all-time leader with 13 state titles — can appear in the same week's field as a 4A nominee. Enrollment tier does not filter who is eligible.

Custom orders

Who are the most recently confirmed offensive winners?
Ben Raines of South River won the Nov. 11 offensive ballot going 10-of-13 for 260 yards and five touchdowns. Amir Elder of Oxon Hill won the Nov. 17 poll on the strength of a 10-of-14, 311-yard, five-touchdown performance. Ty Bussard of Severn School — a private-school quarterback — appeared as a winner cited in both the Nov. 3 and Sept. 16 polls, confirming he took at least two offensive honors in the 2025 season.
Who was on the Nov. 11 offensive ballot?
Four nominees: Ben Raines (South River, 10-of-13, 260 yds, 5 TDs), Amir Elder (Oxon Hill, 10-of-14, 311 yds, 5 TDs), Colton Starlings (Queen Anne's County, 9-of-13, 335 yds, 4 TDs), and Abi Archibong (Fallston, 25 carries, 301 yds, 5 TDs). Archibong was a freshman running back — his nomination in a playoff-week field of senior quarterbacks was the most notable structural detail on that ballot.
Can private-school players appear on the same ballot as MPSSAA public schools?
Yes. The SI Maryland ballot is not restricted to MPSSAA public-school programs. Ty Bussard of Severn School, which competes under MIAA (Maryland Interscholastic Athletic Association) rather than MPSSAA, appeared as a winner multiple times in 2025. Saint James School's Aiden Murphy was a nominee on the Sept. 15 defensive poll. MIAA and WCAC private schools land on the same weekly list as Class 1A through 4A public programs.
Who is Derek Toney, and how does a player get nominated?
Derek Toney is the SI / SBLive author credited on the Maryland weekly football polls. He selects nominees from the weekend's results across all classes and associations. No public submission email is listed for Maryland the way one is for the Dallas / North Texas poll, but submitting standout stat lines to SI's Maryland coverage hub — si.com/high-school/maryland — before or shortly after the weekend games is the best-documented path to getting a performance considered.
What did the Nov. 25 defensive ballot look like?
Six nominees: Cameron Stepp of C. Milton Wright (nine tackles, five sacks — the prior week's defensive winner cited in the poll intro), Travon Pinkney of Old Mill (15 tackles, one sack), Koby Sarkodie of Milford Mill Academy (nine tackles; NC State commit), Breyent Loving-Adkins of Old Mill (12 tackles in a 36-0 win), Kylin Holmes of Paul Laurence Dunbar (two interceptions in a 52-6 win), and Jaxon Sullivan of Patuxent (12 tackles in a 42-0 win). That ballot ran as the 12th defensive honoree of the 2025 season — confirming at least a full 12-week schedule of defensive polls.
Does winning the offensive poll automatically make a player eligible for the defensive poll?
No. Since 2025 the two polls are entirely separate editorial selections with their own nominee fields and their own weekly vote. A two-way player could theoretically appear on both ballots in different weeks, but an offensive win does not carry over to the defensive ballot or vice versa.
Can a freshman realistically win the offensive poll against upperclassmen?
The data says yes. Abi Archibong of Fallston — a freshman running back — was nominated in the Nov. 11 offensive poll on 25 carries, 301 yards, and five touchdowns alongside two senior quarterbacks who each threw for five touchdowns themselves. Class year does not gate eligibility, and a sufficiently dominant stat line from any grade earns a nomination.

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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