Rome News-Tribune

No. 23 Army ranked for 1st time since 1996

- By Ralph D. Russo AP College Football Writer

Army is ranked for the first time since 1996, moving into The Associated Press college football poll at No. 23 as it begins preparatio­ns to face rival Navy on Dec. 8.

The Black Knights (9-2) have been edging toward the Top 25 in recent weeks, and they finally broke through on Sunday. The rankings were mostly unchanged after a weekend with few big games or surprising results.

Led by unanimous No. 1 Alabama, the top six stayed the same as last week. Clemson was No. 2, followed by Notre Dame, Michigan, Georgia and Oklahoma.

Washington State moved up a spot to No. 7 and UCF jumped three spots to No. 8, season highs for both schools. LSU tied Central Florida at No. 8 and Ohio State was 10th.

Also debuting in the Top 25 this season is Pittsburgh at No. 24.

Army being ranked has been a rarity since the early 1960s. From 19632017, there have been only two seasons in which the Black Knights appeared in the AP Top 25. In 1985, Army was No. 19 for one week on its way to a 9-3 season. In 1996, Army went 10-2 and was ranked in four of the final five polls of the season. The Cadets finished 25th that season.

Army managed just one winning record from 1997-2015. But under coach Jeff Monken, who took over in 2014, Army has had three straight winning seasons. The Black Knights head into the Navy game looking for a third straight victory against the Midshipmen and a second consecutiv­e 10-win season.

The Cadets are on a seven-game winning streak since losing in overtime at Oklahoma on Sept. 22.

POLL POINTS

Army and Pitt became the 52nd and 53rd teams to be ranked this season, setting a record for the most ranked teams since the poll expanded to 25 in 1989. The previous high was 51 teams ranked in 2008.

The Panthers, who were 3-4 and 0-3 vs. ranked teams on Oct. 7, are ranked for the first time since Dec. 4, 2016. They have won four straight to win the Atlantic Coast Conference Coastal Division and earn a trip to the league championsh­ip game for the first time.

 ?? / AP-Eugene Tanner, File ?? Navy head coach Ken Niumatalol­o looking on as his team warms up. Navy has one of the most productive running attacks in the nation, ranking third behind Georgia Teach and Army at 286.9 yards per game.
/ AP-Eugene Tanner, File Navy head coach Ken Niumatalol­o looking on as his team warms up. Navy has one of the most productive running attacks in the nation, ranking third behind Georgia Teach and Army at 286.9 yards per game.

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