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Read more →The High School on SI statewide fan vote for the best North Carolina boys basketball performance of the week. SI editors pick roughly ten nominees; anyone can vote with no account; the poll closes Sunday at 11:59 p.m. Pacific after a roughly six-day window.
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That is what the Feb 10, 2025 North Carolina boys basketball field looked like. Three separate nominees posted 40 or more points in a single game: L.J. Smith IV of Lincolnton with 41 points and 13 rebounds against East Burke, Caiden Brewer of East Henderson with 40 points, nine assists, six rebounds, and six steals against Pisgah, and Keontae Barron of Wilson Prep with 40 points against Northwest Halifax. One poll. Same week.
That is the first thing worth knowing about this ballot, and it resets an assumption most people carry in. Many fan polls nominate whoever had a decent game in a slow week. This one does not work that way. SI's editors pulled from a week when three different players each cracked 40 — which means the bar clears 40 and the field is still genuinely competitive. It is also why the outcome here has almost nothing to do with whose stat line was best, and nearly everything to do with which school's community moved fastest before Sunday night at 11:59 p.m. Pacific.
Trent Clark of North Buncombe, who did not score 40, still posted 25 points, seven assists, and four steals in one game and 20 points, 10 rebounds, six steals, and five assists in another that same week. He was one of ten nominees. The field is constructed so that voters who actually watch the box scores will find it genuinely hard to separate the top four or five candidates — and that is exactly the condition that makes turnout, not talent evaluation, the deciding variable.
Map the Feb 10 ballot and what you get is a cross-section of the entire state — almost deliberately so. Lincolnton is in Lincoln County, west of Charlotte. East Henderson sits in the mountains above Hendersonville. North Buncombe is just north of Asheville. North Moore is out in the Sandhills. J.H. Rose is in Greenville. Dudley is in Greensboro. Wilson Prep is in Wilson, east of Raleigh — nearly the opposite end of the state from Hendersonville.
None of those programs share a region. And that matters in a way that is easy to miss at first glance.
A statewide poll that pulls nominees from Charlotte or the Triangle metro tends to funnel existing fan infrastructure — the dense networks of parents and alumni and boosters who already follow one another on social media. This field did not do that. When the nominees are spread from the mountain foothills to the coastal plain, no single metro population has a built-in structural advantage. Charlotte's density does not automatically help Cannon School in Concord the way it would help a Charlotte-proper program, because Cannon is a smaller private independent drawing from a narrower base anyway. A tight-knit county program in Lincoln County that routes a link through a few hundred people in a single text chain can out-total a larger metro school whose fans are distributed and slower to coordinate — and the confirmed field gives that scenario a concrete shape.
| Nominee | School | Region | Stat line (week of Feb 10, 2025) |
|---|---|---|---|
| L.J. Smith IV | Lincolnton | Western Piedmont | 41 pts / 13 reb vs. East Burke; 27 pts / 10 reb vs. West Caldwell |
| Keontae Barron | Wilson Prep | Eastern NC | 40 pts vs. Northwest Halifax |
| Caiden Brewer | East Henderson | Mountains | 40 pts / 9 ast / 6 reb / 6 stl vs. Pisgah |
| Sean Nix | Cannon School | Cabarrus Co. (private) | 34 pts vs. Charlotte Christian; 27 pts vs. Covenant Day |
| Derrick Forney | McDowell | Foothills | 33 pts vs. Asheville; 18 pts vs. Enka |
| C.J. Jones | Dudley | Piedmont Triad | 27 pts vs. Rockingham Co.; 19 pts vs. Northern Guilford |
| Marshall Payne | Marvin Ridge | Union County | 23 pts on 9-for-11 shooting vs. Sun Valley |
| Trent Clark | North Buncombe | Mountains | 25 pts / 7 ast / 4 stl vs. West Henderson; 20 pts / 10 reb / 6 stl / 5 ast vs. Enka |
| Colby Pennington | North Moore | Sandhills | 21 pts / 12 reb vs. Graham |
| T.J. Brown | J.H. Rose | Eastern NC | 19 pts / 5 reb vs. New Bern |
Smith and Brewer are two-game stat lines in that table — SI counted the full week, not just one game, when both had multiple standout performances. So the 41-point game is not Smith's ceiling for that week; he also had 27 points and 10 rebounds against West Caldwell. Clark's two-game total from North Buncombe shows what a floor-game specialist's resume looks like when the editors are paying attention to things other than scoring average. He made this field without cracking 30 points in either game.
The poll closes Sunday at 11:59 p.m. Pacific. For anyone in North Carolina that is 2:59 a.m. Monday Eastern — the last few hours of Sunday night. The practical cutoff for most campaigns is Sunday evening, and the window that precedes it runs roughly six days from when the ballot goes live.
Six days is long enough for a slow start to recover. It is also long enough for an early lead to evaporate if the leading school goes quiet mid-week. And here is the part that makes this genuinely harder than it looks: SI does not show a live vote count while the poll is open. Nobody on either side can see the margin mid-week. That hidden tally is the feature that most shapes campaign behavior, because you cannot calibrate against a number you cannot see — you just have to keep going.
The statewide scope also cuts both ways. Lincolnton's supporters are not competing against Charlotte-area programs with larger raw fan bases in some general sense. They are competing against whoever specifically is on the ballot that week in Wilson, Hendersonville, Asheboro, Greensboro. A program that draws 1,200 fans on a good night in Lincoln County can out-total a school that draws 3,000 if Lincoln County's community organizes around a single link and the larger school's fans treat the poll as someone else's job to handle. That structure — not the size of the school — is what the confirmed Feb 10 field makes concrete, because the ten programs on that ballot had no geographic overlap at all, and the program that organized fastest before Sunday night won.
For how recurring statewide fan votes work week to week, the how-to guide covers the campaign basics. More North Carolina contests are at /usa/north-carolina/. For an open statewide poll where volume is the deciding factor, vote-support campaigns are built for exactly this structure.
The ballot lives inside a weekly article at si.com/high-school/north-carolina, not a static page. Each week SI posts a new article with "vote who should be the North Carolina Boys High School Basketball Player of the Week" in the title, followed by the date. Check the article date before voting — older weeks' polls stay accessible online but are already closed.
SI lists each nominee with the performance that earned the nomination: the point total, rebounds, assists, steals, and the opponent. In the confirmed Feb 10, 2025 poll, stat lines ranged from 41 points and 13 rebounds (L.J. Smith IV, Lincolnton) to 40 points and nine assists (Caiden Brewer, East Henderson). Those details are the only place the full field is explained.
Tap or click your player's name in the poll widget embedded in the article. No account, no login, no email submission required. The page does not display a running vote count, so you will not see a live tally while the poll is open.
The poll runs for roughly six days and closes Sunday at 11:59 p.m. Pacific. There is no cap on return visits during that window. The winner is named in the following week's article, above the new ballot.
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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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