The nouns in the sentence are award and job.
The sentence is a declarative sentence, it makes a statement.
The noun clause is 'whomever did the best job', which is the object of proposition 'to'.
The noun clause in this sentence is "whomever did the best job."
The Best Picture award goes to the producer(s) of the movie.
The 2011 Best Actress in a Musical Tony went to Sutton Foster. She received her award for her performance as Reno Sweeney in the revival of Anything Goes.
The 2011 Best Choreography Tony went to Kathleen Marshall. She received the award for her work on the choreography of the revival of Anything Goes.
Both "whom" and "whomever" work, depending on whether you want a specific person or any person at all. A good trick is to ask if you would use "he" or "him" in its place. "Who" goes with "he," and "whom" goes with "him." You can remember that by associating the words that have an "m" at the end together. (If you are talking about a woman or a girl, you should still use this trick, as "her" does not end with an "m," making it a bit harder to remember which goes with which.)
The American FFA Degree is the award that goes with the Greenhand Degree in FFA.
You can make the word stimulate into a sentence by seing what word best goes in front of it.
Anything Goes received Tony Awards for Best Revival in 2011 and 1988. The original production did not receive any awards.
There is the Golden Boot award which goes to the top goal scorer.
An example of a sentence that uses goes would be:He goes to the store on Monday.