Little change atop BCS, AP rankings

11/23/2009
ASSOCIATED PRESS

NEW YORK - Mississippi, California, and North Carolina, teams that started the season with lofty expectations before stumbling, have surged back into the AP Top 25 college football poll.

There was little change, however, at the top of the rankings after a weekend when most of the highly ranked teams had easy victories or time off.

No. 1 Florida was followed by fellow unbeatens Alabama, Texas, TCU, Cincinnati, and Boise State. Also holding their places were No. 7 Georgia Tech, No. 8 Pittsburgh, and No. 9 Ohio State.

The Gators received 36 first-place votes, Alabama had 13, and Texas 11.

The only change in the top 10 came at No. 10. Oregon moved up a spot after LSU slipped seven places to No. 17 following a 25-23 loss at Ole Miss.

The top seven in the BCS standings were the same as the AP Top 25. Ohio State remains 10th.

The Rebels (8-3) started the season ranked in the top 10, touted as a threat to Alabama in the Southeastern Conference's West Division. Ole Miss reached as high as No. 4 in September before stumbling all the way out of the rankings with three losses.

But the Rebels extended their winning streak to three games by edging LSU in a wild finish, and they moved back into the media rankings at No. 20.

Cal was also a top-10 team in September, considered a Pac-10 title contender. Consecutive blowout losses to Oregon and Southern California sent the Golden Bears tumbling, but they have won five of six since, including Saturday's 34-28 victory at Stanford.

Cal was No. 21 in the latest poll.

North Carolina was expected to challenge Virginia Tech in the Atlantic Coast Conference's Coastal Division and was ranked in the first four polls this season. The Tar Heels reached as high as No. 19, but they lost their first three ACC games and fell out of the rankings.

North Carolina moved back into the Top 25 at No. 23 after winning its fourth straight game, 31-13 at Boston College. UNC's reappearance in the poll gives the ACC five ranked teams, the most of any conference.

Dropping out of the rankings after losses this week were Stanford, Wisconsin, and Rutgers.