Ultimate 2026 Guide to Facebook Contest Votes
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Read more →Shore Sports Insider's weekly Shore Conference boys basketball fan vote for Monmouth and Ocean counties, NJ. Ten nominees across eight divisional slots plus two wild cards — voting is limited to once per hour per voter, the ballot closes Saturday 10:00 AM, and the winner receives a Broad Street Dough Co. gift card.
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.
Most people who arrive at a Shore Sports Insider basketball poll assume it works like the SI polls — click as many times as you want until the deadline. It does not. Shore Sports Insider limits this ballot to once per hour per voter. That single fact changes every calculation.
An SI statewide New Jersey basketball poll is decided by who can aggregate the most raw clicks from a mobilized base. An hourly-capped poll is decided differently: by how many distinct people you can keep engaged across multiple days and multiple returns. The voter who shows up Thursday night, votes, sets an hourly reminder, and keeps going through Friday noon contributes dozens of votes. The voter who clicks three hundred times in an afternoon contributes one.
The Saturday 10:00 AM close reinforces this. That is earlier than almost any comparable poll in New Jersey — the Asbury Park Press multi-sport poll closes Monday at 10:00 PM; the SI state basketball poll closes Sunday. For Shore Sports Insider basketball, Friday night is when it matters. By Saturday morning, the window is essentially shut.
The 2025-26 season opened with ten nominees drawn from across both Monmouth and Ocean counties:
| Nominee | School | Division Slot |
|---|---|---|
| Aiden Sosinov | Manalapan HS | Class A North |
| Ryan Fisher | Red Bank HS | Class A Coastal |
| Rey Weinseimer | Manasquan HS | Class A Central |
| Jaycen Santucci | Central Regional HS | Class A South |
| Brian Tassey | Freehold Borough HS | Class B North |
| Kai Arrington | Keyport HS | Class B Coastal |
| Scot Crowley | Point Pleasant Beach HS | Class B Central |
| Jamel Pitts | Brick Township HS | Class B South |
| Justin Fuerbacher | Christian Brothers Academy | Wild Card |
| Hunter Hynes | Point Pleasant Borough HS | Wild Card |
The thing worth noticing is the spread. Class A North covers the inland Monmouth county towns — Manalapan, Marlboro, Freehold Township — while Class B Coastal pulls from the barrier-island communities and small boroughs along the water. Keyport (Class B Coastal) and Brick Township (Class B South) do not compete against Manasquan and Manalapan on the court during the regular season; here they share a ballot.
Christian Brothers Academy is the outlier. CBA is a Lincroft-based non-public school — NJSIAA Non-Public B — and does not play in the Shore Conference regular-season division structure. Its appearance as a wild card means Shore Sports Insider's editors will reach outside the divisional grid for a performance that demands inclusion. That is relevant for campaign planning: CBA and Donovan Catholic, the other large Shore-area non-public program, arrive with a regional alumni base that does not follow divisional geography at all.
Monmouth and Ocean counties share a Shore Conference, a coastline, and a lot of basketball history. But their fan communities do not move together. Monmouth tends north toward the Red Bank-Asbury corridor and inland toward Freehold; Ocean runs south toward Toms River and the barrier beach towns. A player from Keyport (Monmouth) and a player from Brick Township (Ocean) are on the same ballot but drawing from communities that rarely share the same group chats.
The practical implication: there is less zero-sum competition for the same voter pool than it looks. A Keyport campaign activating Monmouth coastal families is not drawing attention away from a Brick campaign activating Ocean county parents. They can both run hard without cannibalizing each other.
Where this breaks down is at the wild card level. Both wild card slots are open to any school, and the editors can pick programs from either county or from CBA's non-public draw area. A strong wild card nominee from a school like Manasquan — which carries one of the larger and more connected alumni networks on the Shore — can pull from the same Class A Central Monmouth pool that a divisional nominee is already targeting. That is the one case where campaigns should be watching the standings through Thursday to gauge whether consolidation or expansion is the better move.
The full Shore Conference and New Jersey context lives at /usa/new-jersey/, and the national guide directory is at /usa/. For how weekly recurring fan polls work in general, the how-to guide covers the cadence.
For Shore Conference teams with nominees on the ballot, a vote campaign built around the hourly cadence — not a single-session push — is the relevant format here.
The poll lives inside a weekly article published on shoresportsinsider.com, not on a permanent page. Search the site for the current week's Boys Basketball Player of the Week post — the URL includes the week number (e.g., week-1, week-2). Older weeks' ballots may remain technically open, so confirm the date before voting.
Ten nominees are listed — eight representing Shore Conference divisions (Class A North through Class B South) and two wild cards. The nominee names and school affiliations are posted alongside the ballot; each entry shows which division slot the player fills.
Click your player's name in the embedded poll widget. The cap is once per hour per voter — not once per week, not unlimited. Set a reminder: voting from Thursday night through Friday gives the most hourly windows before the Saturday 10:00 AM close.
Shore Sports Insider posts running totals as the poll progresses, so you can see where your nominee stands. The Saturday 10:00 AM close is firm — votes cast after that time do not count regardless of browser caching or page refresh.
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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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