NCAA DI National Team Rankings
NCAA DI National Team Rankings
Close Division I National Team Title Battles Await Pre-Meet Favorites Oregon Men & Texas Women
By Kyle Terwillegar, USTFCCCA
NEW ORLEANS – For a sport in which measurements down to fractions of a second or a single centimeter can make all the difference, the three-day East and West Preliminaries provided an eternity for things to change in the Division I Outdoor Track & Field National Team Computer Rankings.
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And change, they most certainly did, with Tuesday’s announcement of the final set of rankings by the U.S. Track & Field and Cross Country Coaches Association (USTFCCCA) based only on entries into the NCAA Championships in Eugene, Ore., from June 11-14, at Hayward Field.
The men of Oregon stormed to the No. 1 spot in the country while displacing 2013 national co-champions No. 2 Florida and No. 3 Texas A&M in a suddenly compact race for the team title.
Meanwhile, the No. 1 Texas women emerged from what had been a tight race for the women’s crown entering the weekend as a clearer favorite over in-state rival and new No. 2 Texas A&M. No. 3 Oregon, No. 4 Florida and No. 5 Kentucky all also remained firmly in the hunt.
With both Oregon teams in contention, the Ducks could become the first program to either sweep or win three of the four combined indoor and outdoor titles between both genders. The indoor and outdoor championships were both contested in the same academic year for both genders in 1983.
The purpose and methodology of the rankings is to create an index that showcases the teams that have the best potential of achieving the top spots in the national team race.
Rankings points do not equate with NCAA Championships team points. A full description of the rankings can be found here.
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By far the biggest move of the weekend, however, belonged to the Oregon men, who will migrate back home to Eugene as the narrow pre-meet favorites over the Florida Gators.
The Ducks improved their team rankings score by nearly 130 points to check in at 386.64 points, a little more than 20 ahead of Florida (364.79) and 50 clear of Texas A&M (335.04).
Oregon benefited particularly from distance runners around the country sorting themselves from a wide swath of events into only those in which they will compete at NCAAs. The 10,000 meters trio of Edward Cheserek, Parker Stinson and Trevor Dunbar all moved into the top 10, while the 5000 meters trio of Eric Jenkins, Stinson and Cheserek moved up into the top 15 based on seed time.
The 110-meter hurdles were another area of strength for Oregon has frosh Devon Allen moved to No. 3 on the qualifying list – and into a tie at No. 9 all-time – in 13.27 and Johnathan Cabral moved up to No. 8.
Oregon enters the NCAAs as the overall leader in entries with a well-rounded 21 entries (from 36 who competed at the West Prelims), being the only men’s team with competitors in all of the disciplines: sprints/hurdles, mid-distance, distance, relays, jumps, throws, and combined events.
The Ducks are also atop the list of entries into the Championships ranked among the top 10 with 15, while Florida and Texas A&M have 14 and 10, respectively. All three have five ranked within the top three, though Florida has four top seeds to TAMU’s one and Oregon’s zero.
Something of an antithesis to Oregon this weekend was No. 2 Florida. The Gators left the East Prelims relatively unscathed with 16 of their 19 competitors advancing from Jacksonville, Fla., to Eugene. While Oregon improved by nearly 130 points, the Gators saw their team score fall by less than a quarter of a point.
Florida enters with top seeds in Dedric Dukes (200 meters), Marquis Dendy (triple jump), and both relays.
At No. 3, Texas A&M finds itself in somewhat unfamiliar territory: the Aggies have been No. 1 entering the NCAA Championships in each of the past five seasons, winning titles in four of them.
Top seeded Deon Lendore leads four qualifiers for the Aggies at 400 meters, including new No. 5 seed Bralon Taplin, who finished ahead of Lendore at the West Prelims. More than two-thirds of A&M’s 28 entries into the Prelims advanced to the Championships with 19 total.
Rounding out the top five were No. 4 Arkansas (220.26 team score, 15 entries) and No. 5 Texas (171.84, 12 entries), which moved up two positions from a week ago.
The Longhorns were just able to stay ahead of No. 6 LSU (169.38, 10 entries).
A number of teams moved up double-digit positions, led by No. 23 Minnesota (up 20). Others included No. 10 Nebraska (up 13), No. 14 Florida State (up 17), No. 18 Kansas State (up 10) and No. 24 Stephen F. Austin (up 13).
WOMEN
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Much like the Florida men, the Texas women advanced nearly all of their entries from the West Prelims into the NCAA Championships and remained steady in terms of team rankings score. Unlike the Gators, however, the Longhorns were able to keep their grip on the No. 1 spot in the rankings.
Of their 19 entries this past weekend at the Prelims, 16 advanced to the Championships for Texas (383.85), which stayed at the head of a tight pack that includes new No. 2 Texas A&M (341.07), No. 3 Oregon (325.42), No. 4 Florida (311.14) and No. 5 Kentucky (270.18).
That total of 16 puts them in a four-way tie for the second-most overall entries into the Championships with – who else? – Texas A&M and Kentucky, along with No. 7 Arkansas. Oregon topped the list with 20 entries.
Two-time defending 400 meters champion Ashley Spencer may have led the Longhorns in her signature event this weekend to move up to No. 4 in the nation this year, she finds herself behind three of her Longhorns teammates.
Collegiate record-holder Courtney Okolo, frosh Kendal Baisden, Briana Nelson and Spencer are No. 1 through No. 4 this year, and all four combine for the top-ranked 4×400 relay team in the nation.
Those four are among the Longhorns’ nation-leading totals in top-three seeds into the meet (seven) and top-10 seeds (13). Texas A&M and Florida both have 11 entries apiece ranked in the top 10, while Oregon has 10 and Kentucky eight. Texas A&M is also just one behind in terms of top-three seeds with six, while both Oregon and Florida have five each.
Texas is in good position as in four of the past six years – excluding a vacated 2012 title by LSU – the favorite in the final edition of the rankings has gone on to win the team title.
With only 13 of its 24 entries at the East Prelims qualifying to the NCAA’s final rounds combined with other teams’ strong Prelims performances, the Florida Gators (311.14 team rankings score) were the hardest-hit team in this week’s top five with a nearly 41-point tumble from last week to drop two spots.
Moving up to fill that void at No. 2 as one of those teams that had a strong weekend was Texas A&M (341.07), which improved its team score by nearly 12 points. Kamaria Brown moved up to No. 3 at 200 meters to drive the improvement, giving A&M three in the top seven at 200 meters in No. 1 Olivia Ekpone, Brown and No. 7 Ashton Purvis.
No. 3 Oregon saw its team score fall by nearly 20 points, Florida by more than 40 and No. 5 Kentucky (270.18) by just four to round out the top five.
Making the biggest moves of the final edition of the rankings were No. 19 Miami (Fla.) (up 16), No. 20 Akron (up 14), and No. 17 Alabama (up 10).
USTFCCCA NCAA DIVISION I |
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MEN’S OUTDOOR TRACK & FIELD NATIONAL TEAM COMPUTER RANKINGS (TOP 25) |
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2014 Week #9 — June 3 (pre-NCAA finals) |
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next ranking: none, NCAA Championships (FINAL) | |||||
Rank | School | Points | Conference | Head Coach (Yr) | Last Week |
1 | Oregon | 386.64 | Pac-12 | Robert Johnson (2nd) | 3 |
2 | Florida | 364.79 | SEC | Mike Holloway (12th) | 1 |
3 | Texas A&M | 335.04 | SEC | Pat Henry (10th) | 2 |
4 | Arkansas | 220.26 | SEC | Chris Bucknam (6th) | 4 |
5 | Texas | 171.84 | Big 12 | Mario Sategna (1st) | 7 |
6 | LSU | 169.38 | SEC | Dennis Shaver (10th) | 9 |
7 | Georgia | 161.58 | SEC | Wayne Norton (15th) | 6 |
8 | Oklahoma State | 158.45 | Big 12 | Dave Smith (6th) | 8 |
9 | Texas Tech | 143.06 | Big 12 | Wes Kittley (15th) | 5 |
10 | Nebraska | 135.96 | Big Ten | Gary Pepin (31st) | 23 |
11 | Alabama | 111.04 | SEC | Dan Waters (3rd) | 13 |
12 | Arizona | 109.68 | Pac-12 | Fred Harvey (12th) | 20 |
13 | Southern California | 109.25 | Pac-12 | Caryl Smith Gilbert (1st) | 14 |
14 | Florida State | 104.48 | ACC | Bob Braman (11th) | 31 |
15 | Baylor | 101.93 | Big 12 | Todd Harbour (9th) | 15 |
16 | Wisconsin | 98.60 | Big Ten | Mick Byrne (1st) | 12 |
17 | Kentucky | 98.33 | SEC | Edrick Floreal (2nd) | 19 |
18 | Kansas State | 88.36 | Big 12 | Cliff Rovelto (22nd) | 28 |
19 | Penn State | 85.36 | Big Ten | Beth Alford-Sullivan (8th) | 17 |
20 | Pittsburgh | 81.94 | ACC | Alonzo Webb (12th) | 26 |
21 | Mississippi | 72.32 | SEC | Brian O’Neal (2nd) | 11 |
22 | New Mexico | 72.00 | Mountain West | Joe Franklin (7th) | 25 |
23 | Minnesota | 71.87 | Big Ten | Steve Plasencia (6th) | 43 |
24 | Stephen F. Austin | 71.06 | Southland | Phil Olson (14th) | 37 |
25 | UCLA | 69.20 | Pac-12 | Mike Maynard (5th) | 22 |
dropped out: No. 10 BYU, No. 16 Illinois, No. 18 Tennessee, No. 21 Stanford, No. 24 Auburn | |||||
View All Teams Beyond the Top 25 |
Men’s Conference Index Top 10 | |||
Rank | Conference | Points | Top 25 Teams |
1 | SEC | 1750.51 | 8 |
2 | Pac-12 | 957.74 | 4 |
3 | Big 12 | 786.52 | 5 |
4 | Big Ten | 632.95 | 4 |
5 | ACC | 480.81 | 2 |
6 | Conference USA | 291.70 | |
7 | Ivy | 183.39 | |
8 | Mid-American | 181.99 | |
9 | Sun Belt | 174.48 | |
10 | Mountain West | 141.26 | 1 |
USTFCCCA NCAA DIVISION I |
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WOMEN’S OUTDOOR TRACK & FIELD NATIONAL TEAM COMPUTER RANKINGS (TOP 25) |
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2014 Week #9 — June 3 (pre-NCAA finals) |
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next ranking: none, NCAA Championships (FINAL) | |||||
Rank | School | Points | Conference | Head Coach (Yr) | Last Week |
1 | Texas | 383.85 | Big 12 | Mario Sategna (1st) | 1 |
2 | Texas A&M | 341.07 | SEC | Pat Henry (10th) | 4 |
3 | Oregon | 325.42 | Pac-12 | Robert Johnson (2nd) | 3 |
4 | Florida | 311.14 | SEC | Mike Holloway (7th) | 2 |
5 | Kentucky | 270.18 | SEC | Edrick Floreal (2nd) | 5 |
6 | Georgia | 226.49 | SEC | Wayne Norton (15th) | 7 |
7 | Arkansas | 205.12 | SEC | Lance Harter (24th) | 8 |
8 | LSU | 167.01 | SEC | Dennis Shaver (10th) | 6 |
9 | Florida State | 156.85 | ACC | Bob Braman (11th) | 11 |
10 | Stanford | 149.20 | Pac-12 | Chris Miltenberg (2nd) | 10 |
11 | Penn State | 135.77 | Big Ten | Beth Alford-Sullivan (15th) | 16 |
12 | Baylor | 131.03 | Big 12 | Todd Harbour (9th) | 12 |
13 | Southern California | 120.41 | Pac-12 | Caryl Smith Gilbert (1st) | 9 |
14 | Kansas | 98.65 | Big 12 | Stanley Redwine (14th) | 13 |
15 | Texas Tech | 95.68 | Big 12 | Wes Kittley (15th) | 15 |
16 | San Diego State | 94.79 | Mountain West | Shelia Burrell (5th) | 18 |
17 | Alabama | 93.76 | SEC | Dan Waters (3rd) | 27 |
18 | Missouri | 92.12 | SEC | Brett Halter (4th) | 17 |
19 | Miami (Fla.) | 89.00 | ACC | Amy Deem (24th) | 35 |
20 | Akron | 85.73 | Mid-American | Dennis Mitchell (19th) | 34 |
21 | Boise State | 85.27 | Mountain West | Corey Ihmels (1st) | 19 |
22 | Virginia Tech | 83.65 | ACC | Dave Cianelli (13th) | 23 |
23 | Arizona | 79.59 | Pac-12 | Fred Harvey (12th) | 14 |
24 | Kansas State | 76.04 | Big 12 | Cliff Rovelto (22nd) | 28 |
25 | UAB | 69.31 | Conference USA | Kurt Thomas (4th) | 33 |
droppped out: No. 20 Michigan, No. 21 Arizona State, No. 22 NC State, No. 24 Kent State, No. 25 Oklahoma | |||||
View All Teams Beyond the Top 25 |
Women’s Conference Index Top 10 | |||
Rank | Conference | Points | Top 25 Teams |
1 | SEC | 1854.53 | 8 |
2 | Big 12 | 967.00 | 5 |
3 | Pac-12 | 929.69 | 4 |
4 | ACC | 609.75 | 3 |
5 | Big Ten | 510.84 | 1 |
6 | Mid-American | 249.84 | 1 |
7 | Mountain West | 240.90 | 2 |
8 | Conference USA | 238.16 | 1 |
9 | Ivy | 178.07 | |
10 | Big East | 124.48 |