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Read more →Weekly fan-vote poll on mlive.com for the Bay City and mid-Michigan thumb region, run by MLive / Bay City Times (Advance Local) via poll.fm. Eleven nominees per week; cap rules unconfirmed — check the active ballot. The confirmed 2024 winner, John Glenn's Lukas Gies, took 42% in an 11-player field, while Grand Rapids' sibling poll caps votes at one per hour per device.
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Eleven nominees. That is what confirmed poll.fm/14598698 shows for the Bay City ballot. Grand Rapids and Kalamazoo, the two largest MLive Michigan football markets (both cataloged in the Michigan contest directory), field 34 to 44 or more nominees in a single week — sometimes more. That gap is not cosmetic. It changes the arithmetic of every campaign decision a school's supporters make.
Gies won Bay City with 42%. Contrast that with a Kalamazoo winner the same season taking 21% in a 34-player race. Both were winning performances; neither was a runaway. But 42% in a small field means something different from 21% in a large one: the winner needed fewer votes in absolute terms, and the margin separating first from third was much smaller. Laker's Levi Renn finished third at 18% — just 24 percentage points behind the winner. In Kalamazoo, third place often means you are still fighting six or seven other schools for the same fractional slice of a very large total.
| Poll | Typical field size | Vote cap (confirmed) | Close day (confirmed) |
|---|---|---|---|
| Bay City | 11 nominees (confirmed) | Not confirmed — check active ballot | Not confirmed; see article |
| Grand Rapids area | 20–40+ | 1 per hour per device (confirmed) | Not confirmed here |
| Kalamazoo area | 34–44+ nominees | Not confirmed | Not confirmed here |
| Muskegon area | Variable | Not confirmed | 9 a.m. Thursday (confirmed) |
Two things stand out. Grand Rapids is the only Michigan MLive football poll with a confirmed hourly cap — one vote per hour per device — and the statewide playoff poll explicitly allows multiple votes. Bay City sits between those two confirmed reference points, but the active ballot page is the only place that settles it. Do not assume. Check.
The cap question matters precisely because Bay City's field is small. If there is no hourly limit, a concentrated effort by any school — even a rural Arenac County program with fewer than 400 students — can move the needle on an 11-player ballot in ways that would be invisible in Kalamazoo's 40-player field, where one school's additional votes dissolve into a much larger denominator.
The confirmed distribution from poll.fm/14598698 is worth reading closely, because it is the most specific thing known about how the Bay City ballot actually behaves.
| Nominee | School | Vote share |
|---|---|---|
| Lukas Gies | John Glenn | 42% — winner |
| Chase Randall | Clare | 23% |
| Levi Renn | Laker | 18% |
| Pacey Kamen | Mio | 9% |
| Aiden Coggins | Standish-Sterling | 4% |
| Rob Hock | Ogemaw Heights | 3% |
| Gavyn Aikens | All Saints (Bay City) | 1% |
| Charlie Schnettler | Au Gres-Sims | <1% |
| Erik Roggow | Gladwin | <1% |
| Preston Castle | Reese | <1% |
| Jackson Anthony | Cass City | <1% |
Now look at where Clare and Laker finished. Clare is in Clare County — more than 50 miles southwest of Bay City. Laker is a Sanilac County school on the eastern thumb. Neither is a Bay City metro program. Both drew enough organized community voting to finish second and third, ahead of eight other nominees including several closer to Bay City geographically.
That outcome is the most important data point on the page. It confirms that distance from Bay City does not determine results. The three schools that finished in the top three — John Glenn, Clare, Laker — are spread across a 100-mile geographic range, and each outperformed nominally larger or better-known programs by turning out their own community more consistently. The bottom eight nominees combined for 17% total. Third place needed 18%. For a school currently in that bottom group, the gap to the podium is a real threshold — narrow enough to close with a coordinated push, wide enough that doing nothing leaves you there. The how-to guide walks through the share-and-mobilize mechanics that actually move totals on weekly poll.fm ballots like this one, and the national fan-vote index shows how Bay City's small-field format compares to similar regional polls around the country.
A 100-mile radius. That is roughly the span of the Bay City Times coverage area confirmed by the nominee list: Bay County in the west, the Saginaw Bay shoreline, thumb counties like Tuscola and Sanilac, and Oscoda County in the north where Mio sits near the Au Sable River. Most MLive football polls anchor to a metro and its suburbs. This one runs into rural shoreline and farm territory with no large population center beyond Bay City itself.
Au Gres-Sims is an Arenac County school on the bay shoreline. Small enrollment, tight alumni network, the kind of program where the graduating class still shows up on Friday nights years later. Mio draws from Oscoda County — US-33 north, inland, isolated enough that even a strong football performance rarely travels far in the regional news cycle. Cass City, Reese, Gladwin: all Tuscola and Gladwin County thumb schools that share regional schedules but rarely share a media platform with Bay City Central.
The MLive POTW poll is one of the few places they do.
That geography has a practical implication for anyone running a vote campaign here. The poll.fm widget is embedded in the mlive.com article — it is not a standalone URL. A voter who receives a link to the article lands directly on the embedded ballot. A voter who receives a vague mention of the poll has to navigate to mlive.com, find the Bay City high school sports section, locate the current week's article, and scroll to the widget. In a rural county where mlive.com is not everyone's daily read, that extra friction matters. The article link is the campaign; everything else is hoping people find it on their own — and in this geography, many of them will not. For schools whose community reach does not extend far enough on its own, structured vote-support campaigns are built for exactly this kind of open poll.fm ballot.
Go to mlive.com/highschoolsports/bay-city/ and open the Football Player of the Week article posted early each game week. The poll.fm ballot is embedded inside that article — it is not on a separate page. Older poll articles remain accessible but their voting windows are closed, so confirm the article date before you proceed.
Scroll down to the poll.fm widget. Each nominee is listed by name and school. The article text also states the exact close deadline for that week — Bay City's close time has not been independently confirmed as a fixed day, so the article itself is the authoritative source.
Select the player you want to support in the poll.fm widget and cast your vote. The running tally updates live, so you can see where your nominee stands immediately. The Grand Rapids MLive poll caps votes at one per hour per device; the Bay City football poll's cap was not stated in available source data — check the active ballot for any rules displayed there before voting repeatedly.
The poll.fm ballot lives inside the mlive.com article, not at its own address. When you share a vote link, share the full mlive.com article URL so recipients land on the embedded poll, not a broken page. In a region stretching from Bay County to Oscoda County, a direct link posted in a school's booster channel or parent group reaches voters who may not find the article on their own.
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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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