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VarsityWA Basketball Athlete of the Week: How Voting Works & How to Win

VarsityWA's weekly reader poll on the independent Substack publication varsitywanews.com, run by Todd Milles. Ten nominees per week — boys and girls on the same ballot, all WIAA classifications together — unlimited votes with a Friday noon close, running December through early March during the Washington basketball season.

Run by: VarsityWA (Todd Milles, varsitywanews.com) Cadence: weekly Vote cap: Unlimited — no per-period or per-device cap is posted
Thematic photo for VarsityWA Basketball Athlete of the Week showing VarsityWA Basketball Athlete of the Week voting workflow

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One ballot, two genders, six classifications — how VarsityWA built its basketball poll differently

Most high school sports fan-vote polls pick a lane: boys basketball gets its own bracket, girls gets another, and the results never share a denominator. Todd Milles made a different call for VarsityWA's basketball series. Boys and girls nominees go onto the same ten-person ballot every week, and the reader vote is one unified count.

The December 8–13, 2025 field shows what that looks like in practice. Jacey Boesel of Deer Park put up a triple-double — 19 points, 12 rebounds, 10 steals — and sat alongside Tyran Stokes of Rainier Beach (27 points, 14 rebounds, 6 assists) on the same Substack embed. Finley Parcher of Lynden shot 12-of-15 for 32 points. Cooper Fallon of Toledo had 23 points, 24 rebounds, 5 blocks. A 2B program from outside Olympia and a 3A program from Seattle in the same pool, with boys and girls performances judged by the same reader community.

That format matters for mobilization. A family supporting a girls nominee is not voting in a girls-only contest — they are voting against every other nominee on the list, boys included. The community that organizes the broadest turnout wins, not the community whose athlete had the bigger game. It is the structural fact that separates this ballot from a gendered conference award.

The Feb 16–21, 2026 week illustrates the range further. Jalen Davis of Bremerton appeared for his second confirmed ballot, this time off a 29-point District 3 championship performance and a 27-point, 10-assist semifinal game. Bremerton is a 3A program in Kitsap County, across the Sound from Seattle — and Davis made a statewide ballot, competing in the same reader poll as players from Puget Sound's largest 4A schools. Classification stops mattering at the point of the poll.fm widget.

The confirmed nominees — and what they reveal about range

Four weeks of nominees are on the public record for the 2025–26 season. One winner is confirmed: Jordan Bennett of Emerald Ridge won the January 26–31 week. The other weeks' winners are not in the indexed record — VarsityWA announces by updating the original article title, which is not always captured by search indexing. Do not take the absence of other confirmed winners as evidence the poll did not run.

The March 4–7, 2026 ballot — state tournament week — is the sharpest look at what the field looks like at the end of the season. Herbie Wright of Prosser shot 22-of-32 from the floor, hit 6 three-pointers, finished with 57 points and 13 rebounds, and broke a school scoring record. Noelani Tupua of Lake Stevens scored a career-high 40 points and crossed 1,000 career points in the same week. Jackson Whitaker of Liberty (Issaquah, 3A) scored 43 points in a loser-out game against Seattle Prep and passed 2,000 career points. Jalen Davis appeared for a third time, averaging 24.7 points, 8.3 rebounds, 2.0 assists, and 3.3 steals across the state tournament games.

That is the ballot at its peak: multiple nominees whose performances are verifiably historic at the individual-school level, drawn from Yakima, the South Sound, the Eastside suburbs, and Kitsap County. A reader vote with that field is not decided by who had the better game — several of them had arguably the best game of their high school career that same week. It is decided by which community shows up between Monday and Friday noon.

WeekNomineeSchoolKey stat
Dec 8–13, 2025Tyran StokesRainier Beach (3A, boys)27 pts/14 reb/6 ast and 28 pts/9 reb/5 ast
Dec 8–13, 2025Jacey BoeselDeer Park (2A, girls)Triple-double: 19 pts/12 reb/10 stl
Dec 8–13, 2025Finley ParcherLynden (3A, girls)32 pts on 12-of-15 shooting
Feb 2–7, 2026Pierce BierlinkQuincy (2A, boys)64 pts in OT loss; 10 three-pointers
Feb 2–7, 2026Zia-Daye AndersonNathan Hale (3A, girls)45 pts/11 reb/10 stl vs Cleveland
Feb 2–7, 2026Tyran StokesRainier Beach (3A, boys)63 pts vs West Seattle; 51 pts vs Roosevelt
Jan 26–31, 2026Jordan Bennett ✓ WINNEREmerald Ridge (4A, boys)Won reader vote
Mar 4–7, 2026Herbie WrightProsser (2A, girls)57 pts, school record; 22-of-32 FG
Mar 4–7, 2026Jackson WhitakerLiberty/Issaquah (3A, boys)43 pts; 2,000 career pts

Running a campaign when the window is five days

Friday noon is the only deadline that matters here. And Friday noon arrives before most supporters assume a weekly poll has even peaked.

The standard instinct for a fan-vote campaign — let the week develop, post on the weekend, rally Sunday night — does not apply. By Sunday the VarsityWA basketball ballot is closed. A community that waits for the natural rhythm of a week finds out on Friday that it ran out of time on Thursday.

What actually works: the group chat message that goes out Monday or Tuesday when the ballot first opens, before casual supporters have forgotten about it. The team page post on Wednesday when the ballot is still fresh and three days of voting remain. The reminder Thursday morning when Friday noon is close enough to feel real. That is the sequence. Not a late push — an early one.

The nomination piece matters too. Email [email protected] or DM Todd Milles before 5 p.m. Sunday with the stat line and the opponent's name. A performance that nobody flags can be missed. Boesel's triple-double, Bierlink's 64-point overtime game, Wright's 57-point school record — those are the kind of lines that earn a spot on the ballot if the nomination reaches VarsityWA before Monday.

Because the ballot is open and the window is short, services like sports fan-poll vote support are designed for exactly this kind of compressed timeline — extending reach on Monday and Tuesday when the ballot is newest. For the general mechanics of weekly fan-vote campaigns, buy votes online covers the cadence; the how-to guide walks through the early-week activation sequence that matters most here. Washington's other fan-vote polls are at /usa/washington/ and the full national directory at /usa/.

How to vote in VarsityWA Basketball Athlete of the Week

  1. 1

    Find the current week's VarsityWA basketball post

    The poll lives inside a Substack article, not on a permanent page. During basketball season (December through early March), look in the VarsityWA archive at varsitywanews.com for the newest "Vote for VarsityWA's Basketball Athlete of the Week" post. Weeks that have already closed have the winner's name added to the article title — so the active ballot is the one still ending in a question or open call.

  2. 2

    Read the nominees — boys and girls on one list

    Each post names approximately ten players: roughly five boys and five girls from across all WIAA classifications. The stat lines appear above the embedded poll.fm widget. This is a single unified ballot, not separate boys and girls polls, so a vote for one player counts in the same pool as a vote for any other — regardless of gender.

  3. 3

    Vote in the embedded poll.fm widget

    The ballot uses a poll.fm embed inside the article. Select your player in the widget and submit. No VarsityWA subscription, no account, and no login is required. The ballot accepts repeat votes through the Friday noon Pacific close — each submission counts.

  4. 4

    Check the article title Friday afternoon

    VarsityWA does not publish a separate winner announcement. After noon on Friday, Todd Milles updates the original article's title to name the winner. If the article title now includes a player's name and "voted VarsityWA's Basketball Athlete of the Week," the poll is closed and the result is final.

VarsityWA Basketball Athlete of the Week — frequently asked questions

14 answers covering legality, delivery, quality, pricing and platform specifics.

Legality & scope

What does the organizer say about automated voting?
The VarsityWA ballot is designed for manual reader participation. Automated scripts or bots run counter to the purpose of the community poll and can have their votes removed. A result that reflects real reader engagement is the one the poll is built to produce.

Process & delivery

Is there a vote cap on the VarsityWA Basketball poll?
No per-period or per-device cap is posted. The ballot is unlimited through the Friday noon Pacific close. That is meaningfully different from fan-vote polls in some other states that restrict voting to once per day or per device — VarsityWA does not impose those limits on its basketball ballot.
When does a new VarsityWA basketball ballot open each week?
Based on the confirmed 2025–26 weeks, Todd Milles posts the weekly basketball ballot Monday or Tuesday after the weekend's games. The Dec 8–13 poll, for example, opened around December 8 and closed Friday December 13 at noon Pacific. The active window is typically four to five days.

Service quality

How can a vote-support service help with the Friday deadline?
The four-to-five-day window is the binding constraint. A campaign that opens slowly and relies on organic reach building through the week hits Friday noon without having closed the gap. The earlier in the week a community activates its group chats and team pages, the more time the ballot has to respond. See the guide section below for specifics on how to run a short-window campaign on the VarsityWA timeline.

Platform specifics

Why does VarsityWA put boys and girls nominees on the same basketball ballot?
The combined format is Todd Milles's editorial choice for the weekly basketball poll — unlike the football Athlete of the Week, which historically has been a football-only ballot, the basketball poll mixes both. The Dec 8–13 field included Doni Burkett (Todd Beamer, boys), Jacey Boesel (Deer Park, girls), Finley Parcher (Lynden, girls), and others — all competing in one pool. No separate boys and girls tallies are published.
How does the VarsityWA basketball close compare to other Washington fan polls?
VarsityWA closes Friday at noon Pacific — the shortest window of any confirmed Washington high school sports fan-vote poll. The VarsityWA football poll uses the same Friday noon deadline. That is roughly four to five days from post to close, compared to a Monday 11:59 p.m. deadline on the SI statewide polls. The compressed window means there is no opportunity to recover a deficit over a weekend.
How many nominees typically appear each week, and is it always split evenly by gender?
The confirmed weeks show approximately ten nominees total, roughly five boys and five girls — but the split is not mechanically fixed. The Feb 2–7, 2026 ballot had eight confirmed nominees across both genders on the public record, with the exact total depending on what performances Todd Milles found noteworthy that week. It is an editorial selection, not a quota.

Targeting & customisation

How does a small-school or 2B nominee realistically compete on the same ballot as 4A players?
The confirmed December 8–13 field included Chayce Waite-Kellar of Lummi Nation (2B) — 25 points and 24 rebounds — on the same ballot as nominees from Rainier Beach (3A) and Woodinville (4A). A ten-nominee ballot is concentrated enough that a small school with a tight community can match a larger school's turnout at five to ten percent participation. The Substack poll counts clicks, not enrollment.

Custom orders

Who won the VarsityWA Basketball Athlete of the Week for the week of January 26–31, 2026?
Jordan Bennett of Emerald Ridge (4A, Pierce County) won that week. It is the only fully confirmed winner from the 2025–26 basketball season in the public record — VarsityWA announces results by updating the original article title, and the January 26–31 post confirms Bennett's name in the title at varsitywanews.com/p/vote-for-varsitywas-basketball-athlete-527.
What were the most notable stat lines on the December 8–13, 2025 ballot?
The Dec 8–13 week had several standout performances. Jacey Boesel of Deer Park put up a triple-double: 19 points, 12 rebounds, 10 steals. Finley Parcher of Lynden shot 12-of-15 from the field for 32 points. Tyran Stokes of Rainier Beach posted 27 points, 14 rebounds, and 6 assists in one game and 28 points, 9 rebounds, 5 assists in another. Cooper Fallon of Toledo had 23 points, 24 rebounds, and 5 blocks. Those were the confirmed nominees — who won that week is not in the public record.
What were the standout performances on the February 2–7, 2026 ballot?
Pierce Bierlink of Quincy scored 64 points in a single overtime loss — 20-of-41 from the floor with 10 three-pointers. Tyran Stokes appeared again on his second ballot: 63 points against West Seattle, then 51 against Roosevelt. Zia-Daye Anderson of Nathan Hale (girls) had 45 points, 11 rebounds, and 10 steals against Cleveland, then 43 points against Chief Sealth. All three nominees represent different regions, different classifications, and both genders competing on one ballot.
Can I nominate a player for the VarsityWA basketball poll?
Yes. Email [email protected] or send a direct message to VarsityWA on social media by 5 p.m. Sunday with the player's name, school, stat line, and opponent. A submission that lands before Sunday evening has the best chance of making the Monday or Tuesday ballot. Todd Milles selects the final ten from nominations and his own tracking of results statewide.
Does winning a weekly basketball ballot affect postseason recognition like all-state awards?
The weekly reader poll and season-end awards are entirely separate at VarsityWA. The weekly ballot is a fan vote; VarsityWA's all-state and player-of-year recognition at season's end is an editorial selection. On the football side, Blake Moser won two weekly polls in 2025 and was separately named WSFCA all-state offensive player of the year — but those were independent processes. The basketball equivalents work the same way.
Where can I find past VarsityWA basketball results?
Each week's winning player is added to the title of that week's Substack article. The VarsityWA archive at varsitywanews.com/archive lists all posts chronologically — past basketball weeks with a player named in the title are confirmed winners. Some VarsityWA content is subscriber-only, but the weekly athlete poll articles appear to be publicly accessible for voting.

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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