5 Mistakes That Kill Your Facebook Contest Entry
Avoid five critical errors that cost Facebook contest entries votes, trigger flags, or lead to disqualification — with a concrete fix for each mistake.
Read more →One regional paper, one weekly ballot: the Bend Bulletin's boy-plus-girl athlete vote at bendbulletin.com/sports, covering Deschutes County high schools through the OSAA season. Free, public, no account, run by EO Media Group.
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Portland splits its high school sports coverage across several competing outlets. So does the Willamette Valley. Central Oregon doesn't. The Bend Bulletin, part of Oregon's EO Media Group, is functionally the only paper running a weekly fan-vote athlete poll for Deschutes County and the Bend-Redmond corridor, which means every school in the region funnels into one ballot instead of three or four fragmented local ones.
That consolidation shows up in the numbers. The Bulletin ran a confirmed 10-plus weekly polls back to back from January through June 2026 without a gap in coverage, winter into spring, no break between seasons. A school district this size, covering a metro area far smaller than Portland's, still produces a steady weekly ballot because there's no competing outlet splitting the audience. Redmond's programs and Bend's programs show up on the same page, the same week, voting against the same clock. It's the kind of consistent, publicly tallied fan vote we cover in our broader look at how real fan-vote polls actually run.
Two nominee pools, not one. A wrestler and a swimmer from the same school can both land on the ballot the same week without knocking each other off it, because the Bulletin runs a separate boy vote and girl vote rather than a combined ranking. That's a small mechanical choice with a real effect: it roughly doubles how many local athletes get a shot at recognition across a season compared to a single-pool format.
| Item | Detail |
|---|---|
| Organiser | The Bend Bulletin / EO Media Group |
| Ballot structure | One nominated boy athlete + one nominated girl athlete per week |
| Region covered | Central Oregon, Deschutes County, Bend, Redmond area |
| Sports covered (in-season rotation) | Tennis, swimming, basketball, wrestling, track and field, baseball, softball |
| Account required | No |
| Cost to vote | Free |
| Confirmed 2026 coverage window | January through June (10+ distinct weekly articles) |
The sport mix isn't fixed. It tracks the season: tennis, swimming, basketball, and wrestling dominate the winter weeks, then the pool flips almost entirely to track, baseball, and softball once spring hits. Check the byline date before you vote, not just the URL. The Bulletin doesn't pull old weekly posts down, so a three-week-old article can still look live. For the neighboring statewide ballot, see Oregon High School Athlete of the Week.
No second vote happens here. The Bulletin's annual athletes-of-the-year ceremony draws its honorees from the same pool the weekly polls already recognized. It's a season-ending recognition event, not a parallel ballot with its own mechanic. The most recent edition was the 3rd annual ceremony, held in Bend in June 2026, where Central Oregon high school athletes received certificates and medals across the region's classification divisions.
So a nominee's path runs through one program end to end: weekly recognition during the season, then a shot at the June ceremony if the Bulletin's sports desk carries their name forward. Compare that to how Oregon High School Player of the Year structures its own season-long honor elsewhere in the state, a different mechanic with the same instinct to reward a full year rather than a single week.
Small population, tight networks. Deschutes County doesn't have Portland-scale numbers, but it doesn't need them. A school community here is more likely to be one booster group chat, one alumni Facebook page, and one set of parents who all know each other by name. That's a structural advantage a fragmented big-metro market doesn't get: word about a Friday nominee reaches nearly everyone who'd vote within a day, not a week.
None of that changes what the Bulletin actually polices. The organiser hasn't published a specific vote cap beyond the weekly window itself, and the live article is the only authoritative source for that week's exact rules. Treat "no published cap" as exactly that, not an invitation to script anything. For readers weighing legitimate ways to build turnout around a local fan-vote format like this one, fan poll voting resources cover the mechanics of running a real campaign, our guide to getting more votes online covers organic mobilization tactics, and general vote-buying guidance applies if a future format here ever requires an account or CAPTCHA step. The broader USA fan-vote directory is the place to compare how this consolidated-market pattern plays out in other states.
The Bulletin runs a fresh Athletes of the Week post most weeks. Check the byline date first. Old weekly articles stay live on bendbulletin.com/sports long after their ballot closed, and that's the single most common way a vote gets wasted on a poll that already ended.
Each post breaks down what the boy nominee and the girl nominee actually did that week (school, sport, the performance itself). Across the confirmed 2026 run that's meant tennis and swimming in the winter, then track, baseball, and softball once spring hit.
Two separate picks, not one combined ballot. No login, no account creation. You vote and you're done.
The weekly poll feeds a season-capping ceremony rather than disappearing into an archive. The 3rd annual edition happened in Bend in June 2026, pulling from the year's pool of weekly-recognized athletes.
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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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