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Surprisingly Quiet Week Atop Men’s NCAA DI National Rankings - USTFCCCAPublished by
NEW ORLEANS – The college track & field weekend schedule may have been busy with great meets from coast-to-coast, but the top of the latest men’s NCAA Division I National Team Rankings was anything but busy.
Headlined for a fourth straight week by the No. 1 Texas A&Mmen, each of the top nine teams remained steady in the week five rankings announced Monday afternoon by the U.S. Track & Field and Cross Country Coaches Association (USTFCCCA). The Aggie men held off contingents from No. 2 Florida, No. 3 LSU, No. 4 Arkansas and No. 8 Alabama at a rain-soaked LSU Invitational on Saturday. No. 5 Georgia was the lone top-five squad not in Baton Rouge for the weekend.
While Texas A&M (340.58 ranking points) came out on top in the LSU Invitational, it was actually No. 2 Florida (279.06) points that benefitted the most from the weekend’s competition. The Gators improved by nearly 18 points – the most of any top-10 team – as long jumper KeAndre Bates had a big weekend to move to No. 4 nationally. Keep in mind that though Florida finished fifth at LSU – behind Texas A&M, Alabama, LSU and Arkansas – the National Team Rankings aren’t meant to predict how teams will do in small meets. Rather, they predict success exclusively for the NCAA Championships in Eugene, Oregon, on June 8-11. Also, the Gators sent several key athletes to the Penn Relays. No. 3 LSU (250.08) and No. 4 Arkansas (207.25) both gained slightly on A&M in the rankings. Also remaining stationary were No. 5 Georgia (176.84), No. 6Texas (175.84), No. 7 Oregon (159.44), No. 8 Alabama (154.92) and No. 9 Texas Tech (130.41). Virginia Tech moved up three spots to No. 10, and that’s where this week’s rankings fun began. From that point on, only three teams between No. 10 and No. 25 remained in the same position as a week ago. No team jumped up higher than the host of the meet that drove most of the changes in the bottom three-fifths of the top-25: The Payton Jordan Invitational. Stanford jumped 22 spots to No. 16 as Sean McGorty moved to No. 2 on the USTFCCCA list at 5000 meters (which still includes previous year marks for the 5000 and 10,000) behind Edward Cheserek of Oregon, while frosh Grant Fisher came in at No. 13 on that same list. Also making a big jump was No. 18 Northern Arizona, which climbed 13 positions behind top-ranked 10,000-meter man Futsum Zienasellassie. The National Team Computer Rankings are complied by a mathematical formula based on national descending order lists. 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. Preseason marks will be included through week three of the rankings (with the exception of marks in the combined events and the 5000 and 10,000). A full description of the rankings can be found here.
Read the full article at: www.ustfccca.org
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