Marin Independent Journal

Houston back at No. 1 in AP Top 25

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Houston returned to No. 1 in the AP men's college basketball poll on Monday for the third time this season, while Northweste­rn and Texas A&M barged into the rankings after each had a pair of impressive wins last week.

The Cougars, riding a seven-game winning streak, jumped over Alabama and back into the top spot, where they spent two weeks in November and December and had another two-week stint last month. They picked up 48 first-place votes from the 62-member national media panel to lay claim to No. 1 with just two weeks left in the regular season.

The Crimson Tide dropped only one spot after losing to Tennessee and routing Georgia in their lone week at No. 1. They held onto seven firstplace votes, while Kansas also earned seven to climb two spots to No. 3 in this week's poll.

UCLA remained at No. 4 while Purdue slid two spots to round out of the top five.

Women's basketball

SOUTH CAROLINA'S NO. RUN HITS 35 WEEKS >> South Carolina survived one of its stiffest tests of the season to remain No. 1 in The Associated Press women's college basketball poll released Monday.

The Gamecocks (27-0) topped Mississipp­i in overtime on Sunday to win their 33rd consecutiv­e game and secure the top spot in the poll for a 35th consecutiv­e week. That is the third-longest run atop the poll, with UConn (51 weeks) and Louisiana Tech (36) having had longer streaks at No. 1. The Gamecocks broke a tie with UConn for third place.

South Carolina received 27 of the 28 first-place votes from the national media panel. It was the first time this season that the team wasn't a unanimous choice at No. 1.

Indiana got the other first place vote and stayed second in the poll. Stanford, UConn and LSU round out the top five teams.

Olympics

NATIONS: NO CLARITY ON NEUTRALITY >>

The government­s of more than 30 nations released a letter Monday calling on the IOC to clarify the definition of “neutrality” as it seeks a way to allow Russian and Belarusian athletes back into internatio­nal sports and, ultimately, next year's Paris Olympics.

“As long as these fundamenta­l issues and the substantia­l lack of clarity and concrete detail on a workable `neutrality' model are not addressed, we do not agree that Russian and Belarusian athletes should be allowed back into competitio­n,” read the letter, which was obtained by The Associated Press in advance of its wider release.

Among those signing the letter were officials from the United States, Britain, France, Canada and Germany. Those five countries brought nearly one-fifth of all athletes to the Tokyo Games in 2021. Other countries — such as Poland, Latvia, Estonia and Lithuania, which had suggested an Olympic boycott was possible if the war continues — also signed onto the letter, which did not go so far as to mention a boycott.

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