AP TOP 25 Deacons a runaway No. 1 in latest poll



The Atlantic Coast Conference tied a record with seven ranked teams.
Associated Press
Virginia moved into The Associated Press' men's college basketball Top 25 Monday, giving the Atlantic Coast Conference a record-tying seven teams in the poll.
Wake Forest extended its lead at No. 1, the Cavaliers were No. 24, and there were five other conference schools in between, matching the feat accomplished twice by the Big Ten and once by the ACC.
The Demon Deacons (5-0) used their Preseason NIT championship to pull away from No. 2 Kansas (2-0). Wake Forest had 40 first-place votes and 1,737 points from the national media panel, while the Jayhawks were No. 1 on 18 ballots and had 1,678 points.
Last week, Wake Forest received 25 first-place votes, one fewer than Kansas, and had 19 more points.
The other ranked ACC teams were No. 4 Georgia Tech, No. 9 North Carolina, No. 10 Duke, No. 12 Maryland and No. 16 North Carolina State.
The Big Ten had seven teams ranked for one week in January 1993, and for four weeks in January 1999. The ACC did it for two weeks in December 1997.
No. 3 Syracuse and Georgia Tech switched places from last week. The Orange (5-0) had four first-place votes, while Georgia Tech (3-0), which beat Illinois-Chicago 60-59 and Arkansas-Little Rock 79-54, was No. 1 on seven ballots.
Illinois, Oklahoma State, Connecticut and Kentucky held spots five through eight from last week. Illinois got one first-place vote, Oklahoma State had two.
North Carolina, which won the Maui Invitational, moved up from 11th, while Duke dropped one spot.
Michigan State was 11th, followed by Maryland, Pittsburgh, Washington, Mississippi State, North Carolina State, Louisville, Texas, Florida and Notre Dame.
The last five ranked teams were Arizona, Alabama, Iowa, Virginia and Wisconsin.
Women's poll
LSU replaced Tennessee as the No. 1 team in The AP women's basketball poll Monday amid a shake-up triggered by several upsets. Three of last week's top four teams lost; only LSU (7-0) emerged unscathed.
LSU, second last week, received 42 of 44 first-place votes from a national media panel to claim its first No. 1 ranking since 1978, when the Lady Tigers spent four weeks atop the poll. That was the only other time they were No. 1.
Tennessee (4-1), No. 1 in the first three polls, dropped to fourth after a 74-59 loss at Texas. North Carolina (5-0) moved up three spots to second, its highest ranking ever, and Notre Dame (6-0) jumped three places to No. 3.
Stanford (5-0) went from No. 7 to No. 5, Georgia (4-1) fell three places to No. 6 after losing to TCU in Hawaii, and Texas (2-2) tumbled three spots to No. 7. After knocking off Tennessee on Thursday, the Longhorns lost at UCLA.
Texas still received one first-place vote, as did North Carolina, whose highest ranking previously was third, in 1994 and 1995.
Connecticut, Baylor and Duke completed the top 10, holding last week's positions.
Ohio State remained 11th.