AP Top 25: Alabama returns to No. 1; Ole Miss, Utah slide after Week 6


Alabama returned to No. 1 in The Associated Press college football poll for the first time in two years on Sunday following its dizzying victory over Georgia, making this 16 of 17 seasons the Crimson Tide has held the top spot at some point.

Alabama received 40 of 63 first-place votes and leapfrogged three teams to take over No. 1 from Texas, which tussled with Mississippi State deep into the second half as a five-touchdown favorite and slipped to No. 2. The Longhorns got 19 first-place votes, well off last week’s 44.

Ohio State remained No. 3 with four first-place votes. Tennessee, which had an open date, moved up a spot to No. 4. Georgia, whose only three losses since 2021 have come to Alabama, dropped to No. 5.

Oregon, Penn State, Miami (Fla.), Missouri and Michigan rounded out the top 10.

Ole Miss and Utah took the biggest falls. The Rebels, upset by Kentucky at home, dropped from No. 6 to No. 12. The Utes, who lost to Arizona at home, went from No. 10 to No. 18.

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Alabama, which is No. 1 for the first time under coach Kalen DeBoer, has posted back-to-back impressive wins with Heisman Trophy front-runner Jalen Milroe and freshman phenom receiver Ryan Williams leading the way.

The Tide won 42-10 on the road against Wisconsin two weeks ago and prevailed 41-34 against Georgia on Saturday night after squandering a 28-point first-half lead.

[Read more: Jalen Milroe, Ryan Williams lead Alabama to thrilling win over Georgia]

The Tide hadn’t been No. 1 since Oct. 2, 2022. They memorably held the spot for just one week after needing a late goal-line stand to beat an unranked Texas A&M at home, with Milroe subbing for injured 2021 Heisman winner Bryce Young that night.

The Tide are No. 1 for the 141st time, the most of any team since the AP rankings began in 1936, and for the 105th time since 2009 — when Nick Saban won the first of his six national championships at Alabama.

[Read more: 2024 Heisman Watch: Jalen Milroe on top; Travis Hunter climbs leaderboard]

The SEC holds four of the top five spots for the fourth straight week, an ongoing first in the AP poll. The only other time in the 88-year history of the poll that a conference had four of the top five teams was the SEC on Oct. 19, 2014 (No. 1 Mississippi State, No. 3 Ole Miss, No. 4 Alabama and No. 5 Auburn). That lasted a week.

The SEC holds nine spots in the Top 25, one off its own record for number of ranked teams from one conference.

The Big Ten has four teams in the top 10 for the first time since October 2021 and seven in the Top 25.

UNLV, unbeaten through four games for the first time in its Division I history, cracked the rankings for the first time ever just days after losing its starting quarterback over an NIL dispute. The Rebels are tied for No. 25 with Texas A&M.

UNLV was one of the feel-good stories of the season even before QB Matthew Sluka announced he would sit out the rest of the season, contending he was cheated out of a $100,000 name, image and likeness payment.

The Rebels, with Hajj-Malik Williams starring as the new quarterback, beat Fresno State on Saturday, 59-14. Now the Rebels sit 4-0 for the first time since 1976, when they were a Division II team, and they will look to knock off a third power-conference opponent when they visit Syracuse this week.

Is Matthew Sluka, UNLV’s NIL dispute a WORRYING sign for CFB?

Also entering the rankings is Indiana at No. 23. The Hoosiers, who are 5-0 for the first time since 1967, hadn’t been ranked since they were No. 17 in the 2021 preseason poll.

Oklahoma State dropped out. The Cowboys, who were No. 20, have lost two straight against ranked opponents, most recently getting blown out at Kansas State.

SEC: 9 (Nos. 1, 2, 4, 5, 9, 12, 13, 19, T-25).

Big Ten: 7 (Nos. 3, 6, 7, 10, 11, 23, 24).

Big 12: 4 (Nos. 16, 17, 18, 20).

ACC: 3 (Nos. 8, 15, 22).

Mountain West: 2 (No. 21, T-25).

Independent: 1 (No. 14).

Here’s the full top 25:

1. Alabama 
2. Texas 
3. Ohio State
4. Tennessee 
5. Georgia 
6. Oregon
7. Penn State 
8. Miami (Fla.) 
9. Missouri 
10. Michigan
11. USC 
12. Ole Miss 
13. LSU
14. Notre Dame 
15. Clemson
16. Iowa State
17. BYU
18. Utah 
19. Oklahoma
20. Kansas State
21. Boise State
22. Louisville
23. Indiana 
24. Illinois 
25. UNLV

Reporting by The Associated Press.

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