Tuesday, October 06, 2015

First Big Shake-Up of 2015 Rocks Men’s DI National Coaches’ Poll

First Big Shake-Up of 2015 Rocks Men’s DI National Coaches’ Poll


By Kyle Terwillegar, USTFCCCA
October 6, 2015   



NEW ORLEANS – Following Monday’s eventful NCAA Division I men’s cross country Regional Rankings, it was inevitable that Tuesday’s National Coaches’ Poll would be in for its first top-10 shakeup of the 2015 season.
With eight of the top ten teams from a week ago in different positions and two new top-10 squads, that inevitability came to pass in a big way – and it extended far beyond just the top-ten.
National PDFs: Top 30 Summary | Week-by-Week 2015 | Week-by-Week All Time
Regional Rankings: Summary | RecapMORE: NCAA DI Polls & Rankings Home | Women’s National Coaches’ Poll

NCAA Division I National Coaches Poll Top 5 – Men

1)Colorado2)Oregon3)Oklahoma State4)Syracuse)5)Villanova
ColoradoSyracuseOregonStanfordIona
View Complete Men’s National Coaches Poll
The two-time defending champion Colorado men remained the unanimous No. 1 with a strong debut at its Rocky Mountain Shootout, but the Buffaloes’ next three challengers lined up in a different order for the first time this season. In fact, 27 of the next 29 teams stacked up differently from a week ago.
Stanford dropped two spots to No. 4 with a runner-up finish at the Washington Invitational to new No. 3 Oregon, which improved two spots from last week. Moving up to claim Stanford’s vacated position directly behind Colorado at No. 2 was idle Syracuse.
With a month-and-a-half left on the calendar between now and the NCAA Championships in Louisville on November 21, there’s still a significant of racing to be done, particularly by Stanford. In their 52-69 loss to the Ducks, the Cardinal ran without All-Americans Jim Rosa, Sean McGorty and Sam Wharton, and potential All-American frosh Grant Fisher; the Ducks, too, ran without some key athletes in Jake Leingang, Jeramy Elkaim and Blake Haney.
Also from the Washington Invitational, No. 9 BYU leapt up three spots from a week ago following a third-place finish.
As impactful as the results from the Washington Invitational were on the top-10, the happenings at the Greater Louisville Classic made just as big an impact. Its team champion, Iona, moved up three spots to No. 5 in the country, while runner-up Michigan – led by National Athlete of the Week Mason Ferlic – jumped two positions to No. 8.
The Wolverines haven’t been ranked so highly since the 2008 season.
Not everyone left EP “Tom” Sawyer Park unscathed, though. Though Wisconsin used the meet as a course preview-workout combination, the former No. 4 Badgers fell seven spots to No. 11. UW finished seventh in the meet as their top four finishers all finished within .03 of one another.
Ole Miss debuted its “A” squad at the GLC and finished fourth in a tiebreak, tumbling from No. 13 to No. 19.
Though former No. 7 Villanova didn’t compete at Louisville, they, too, dropped out of the top-10 with a poor showing this past weekend. Patrick Tiernan, Jordy Williamsz and Rob Denault went 1-2-4 for the Wildcats at the Lehigh Paul Short Run, but depth was lacking and they were upset by Georgetown. The Hoyas moved up four spots to No. 10.
Stanford, Wisconsin and Ole Miss will all have an opportunity to recover in the rankings when they head to the loaded Wisconsin adidas Invitational on October 16. So, too, does UCLA, which finished fourth at Washington and dropped nine spots to No. 20.
Elsewhere in the top-10, idle No. 6 Oklahoma State remained steady and idle No. 7 Virginia moved up two spots to its highest-ever rank in program history.
Beyond the top 10, UTEP and Louisville had such good weekends that they went from simply receiving national votes to tied for No. 13 and tied for No. 17, respectively.
UTEP, powered by a win by Anthony Rotich and third-place Jonah Koech, stormed to the lead early at the Joe Piane Notre Dame Invitational and the six-man roster held on late to claim a victory over NC State, 89-97. This is the first top-30 appearance for UTEP since 2008.
Notably, NC State also moved up 10 spots into a share of that No. 17 rank with Louisville.
Those Cardinals – up to their highest rank since 2007 – were the third-place team at the Greater Louisville Classic, having a tie broken with Ole Miss in their favor. UL had three of the top 10 individuals in runner-up Edwin Kibichiy, fifth-place Japhet Kipkoech and 10th-place Ernest Kibet.
Four new teams closed out the top-30 this week in No. 27 Princeton, No. 28 Columbia, No. 29 Air Force and No. 30 Texas.
For Air Force, this isn’t the program’s highest ranking ever, but it is the program’s earliest top-30 appearance since 2005.
The 2015 NCAA Division I Cross Country Championships will be held Saturday, November 21, at E.P. "Tom" Sawyer Park in Louisville, Kentucky.

USTFCCCA NCAA Division I

Men’s Cross Country National Coaches’ Poll

2015 Week #4 — October 6

next poll: October 20
RankInstitution (FPV)PointsRecordRegionConferenceCross Country Coach (Yr*)
Last Week
1Colorado (12)3601-0MountainPac-12Mark Wetmore (21st)
1
2Syracuse34320-0NortheastACCChris Fox (11th)
3
3Oregon33110-0WestPac-12Robert Johnson (4th)
5
4Stanford32419-1WestPac-12Chris Miltenberg (4th)
2
5Iona31120-0NortheastMetro AtlanticRicardo Santos (8th)
8
6Oklahoma State2955-0MidwestBig 12Dave Smith (10th)
6
7Virginia27415-0SoutheastACCPeter Watson (4th)
9
8Michigan26819-1Great LakesBig TenKevin Sullivan (2nd)
10
9BYU2678-2MountainWest CoastEd Eyestone (16th)
12
10Georgetown25717-0Mid-AtlanticBig EastMichael Smith (1st)
14
11Wisconsin22314-6Great LakesBig TenMick Byrne (8th)
4
12Villanova20916-1Mid-AtlanticBig EastMarcus O’Sullivan (16th)
7
13Arkansas19114-0South CentralSECChris Bucknam (8th)
15
13UTEP19119-0MountainConference USAPaul Ereng (13th)
RV
15Michigan State17121-0Great LakesBig TenWalt Drenth (12th)
16
16Indiana1589-0Great LakesBig TenRon Helmer (9th)
19
17Louisville15018-2SoutheastACCDale Cowper (3rd)
RV
17NC State15018-1SoutheastACCRollie Geiger (38th)
27
19Mississippi14317-3SouthSECRyan Vanhoy (3rd)
13
20UCLA1367-3WestPac-12Mike Maynard (7th)
11
21Oklahoma13414-1MidwestBig 12Jason Dunn (3rd)
21
22California12823-4WestPac-12Tony Sandoval (24th)
25
23Colorado State9735-5MountainMountain WestArt Siemers (4th)
26
24Furman8913-2SoutheastSouthernRobert Gary (4th)
20
25Southern Utah7636-4MountainBig SkyEric Houle (24th)
23
26Iowa State738-0MidwestBig 12Martin Smith (3rd)
22
27Princeton388-1Mid-AtlanticIvyJason Vigilante (4th)
NR
28Columbia2814-0NortheastIvyDan Ireland (2nd)
NR
29Air Force246-4MountainMountain WestRyan Cole (2nd)
NR
30Texas2320-1South CentralBig 12Mario Sategna (3rd)
RV
Others Receiving Votes: Illinois 19, Georgia 11, Northern Arizona 10, Boise State 10, Eastern Kentucky 10, Tulsa 10, Arizona State 9, Dartmouth 9, Virginia Tech 8, Washington 7, Florida State 6, North Texas 3, Purdue 3, Providence 2, Eastern Michigan 2, New Mexico 1
Dropped Out: No. 17 New Mexico, No. 18 Arizona State, No. 24 Providence, No. 28 Eastern Kentucky, No. 29 North Carolina, No. 30 Northern Arizona
Win-loss record reflective of results in varsity competition versus DI opponents starting September 25
(* year as effective coach of that team in men’s cross country)

               

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