The Oklahoman

Virginia stays at No. 1 in AP Top 25; Oklahoma falls out

- BY AARON BEARD AP Basketball Writer

RALEIGH, N.C. — Virginia strengthen­ed its hold on No. 1 in the AP Top 25 as it coasts to an Atlantic Coast Conference regular-season title, while Duke made a big jump after a pair of impressive wins without its top freshman.

The Cavaliers earned 42 of 65 first-place votes in the poll released Monday. That’s 12 more than last week, when they reached No. 1 for the first time since the Ralph Sampson era.

The top four remained unchanged, with No. 2 Michigan State earning 19 first-place votes after rallying from 27 down to beat Northweste­rn. Third-ranked Villanova got the other four first-place votes after winning at No. 4 Xavier. And Duke jumped seven spots to No. 5 after beating Virginia Tech and Clemson despite playing without Marvin Bagley, the ACC’s scoring and rebounding leader who is recovering from a knee sprain.

TOP 10 CHANGES

It was a tough week at the top of last week’s poll, with seven of the top 10 teams losing at least once, so there was a shuffle Monday.

Texas Tech and Gonzaga were tied for No. 6, with the Red Raiders inching up a spot and the Bulldogs moving up three. Kansas jumped five spots to No. 8 after beating West Virginia, followed by Purdue (which slid three spots) and North Carolina — which has won five straight and climbed four spots to No. 10.

MILESTONE

Middle Tennessee checked in at No. 24, marking the first AP Top 25 poll appearance in program history.

TOP RISERS

While Duke had the biggest jump of the week, No. 13 Wichita State moved up six spots after beating Temple and then-No. 5 Cincinnati. No. 17 Michigan joined Kansas in making a five-spot move after wins against Iowa and then-No. 8 Ohio State.

LONGEST SLIDES

The Buckeyes had a rough week with double-digit losses at Penn State and Michigan, leading them to the biggest fall in Monday’s poll. Ohio State fell eight spots to No. 16.

St. Mary’s fell seven spots to No. 22 after losing at San Francisco, while the Bearcats fell six spots to No. 11 after losses to Houston and Wichita State.

NEWCOMERS

Speaking of Houston, Kelvin Sampson’s Cougars checked in at No. 23 for the program’s first AP poll appearance since spending a week at No. 25 in December 2005. Before that, Houston’s last poll appearance was a week at No. 25 in January 1993. Those are the program’s only appearance­s since future NBA great Hakeem Olajuwon was the Cougars’ big man on the way to being the No. 1 overall draft pick in 1984.

Florida State re-entered the poll at No. 25. The Seminoles were ranked for five weeks earlier this year.

SLIDING OUT

Oklahoma and freshman Trae Young — the nation’s scoring and assists leader — went from unranked in the preseason all the way to No. 4 on Jan. 15. But the Sooners have collapsed with six straight losses and that sent them back to unranked status.

Two other teams that had reached the top 5 as of Christmas Day fell out of the poll again. Texas A&M, which peaked at No. 5, fell out from No. 21 after losses to Missouri and Arkansas. Arizona State, which peaked at No. 3, fell out from No. 25 after losing to Arizona.

WOMEN

LSU is back in the women’s AP Top 25 for the first time in four years while UConn and Mississipp­i State continue to lead the poll.

The Tigers came back into poll on Monday for the first time since Feb. 17, 2014, entering at No. 24. LSU has won six of its past seven games to move into third in a very competitiv­e SEC. That includes wins over Tennessee, Georgia and Texas A&M, who are all ranked.

UConn remains the unanimous No. 1 team.

 ?? [AP PHOTO] ?? Virginia’s Kyle Guy, left, and Jack Salt walk off the court in January following a victory against Duke in Durham, N.C. The Cavaliers remained at No. 1 in Monday’s AP Top 25 poll, earning 42 of 65 first-place votes.
[AP PHOTO] Virginia’s Kyle Guy, left, and Jack Salt walk off the court in January following a victory against Duke in Durham, N.C. The Cavaliers remained at No. 1 in Monday’s AP Top 25 poll, earning 42 of 65 first-place votes.

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