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DI Men’s National Coaches’ Poll Shuffles in Week Three - USTFCCCAPublished by
By Kyle Terwillegar, USTFCCCA September 29, 2015 NEW ORLEANS – The status quo remained in place at the top of the NCAA Division I men’s cross country National Coaches’ Poll announced Tuesday by the U.S. Track & Field and Cross Country Coaches Association (USTFCCCA). But from No. 11 on down? It turned from status quo to anything goes. National PDFs: Top 30 Summary | Week-by-Week 2015 | Week-by-Week All Time The first weekend of countable action for NCAA Championships at-large qualifying produced a number of big shifts in the third National Coaches’ Poll of the regular season. Seven teams moved four or more spots in either direction, and an additional two teams hopped into the top-30 for the first time this season.
Little changed among the top 10 teams as only No. 3 Syracuse, No. 6 Oklahoma State (down one spot) and No. 9 Virginiawere in action. Oregon andOklahoma State swapped spots at Nos. 5 and 6. The top 10 gets its chance to shine this weekend, however, as unanimous No. 1 Colorado hosts its Rocky Mountain Shootout; No. 2Stanford and No. 5 Oregon meet at the Washington Invitational; No. 4 Wisconsin competes at the Greater Louisville Classic with Big Ten rival No. 10 Michigan; No. 7 Villanova is at Lehigh’s Paul Short Run; and No. 8Iona is split between Louisville and Lehigh. The meets at Washington and Louisville will be covered live on the USTFCCCA National Results Wall, as will the Notre Dame Invitational and Princeton Inter-Regional Invitational. Making the biggest leap up the poll based on last weekend’s action was No. 16 Michigan State, which improved nine spots from a week ago after a surprising team title at the Roy Griak Invitational. The Spartans – running without former All-American Caleb Rhynard, who was fourth at Griak a year ago – with four runners in the top-15, led by seventh- and eighth-place efforts from TJ Carey and Ryan Robinson. The No. 16 billing for MSU is the program’s best since head coach Walt Drenth took over in 2004 (17th in week seven of 2014) and is the best for the program overall since 2002. Michigan State wasn’t alone in making significant leaps up the ranks. Formerly unranked No. 21 Oklahomajoined the top 30 after a strong runner-up showing at Virginia’s Panorama Farms Invitational behind a 3-4 finish from Brandon Doughty and Jacob Burcham. An idle No. 22 Iowa State squad moved up four spots, followed by another new team in No. 23 Southern Utah. The Thunderbirds finished runners-up at Roy Griak. Roy Griak was also responsible for the placement of teams No. 25 and No. 26. California moved up four to No. 25 with a third-place finish at 94 points, just ahead of No. 26 Colorado State at 96. The Rams dropped four spots from a week ago after entering as the meet’s top-ranked team, despite a 1-2 individual finish fromJefferson Abbey and Jerrell Mock. Closing out the top 30 was a trio of tumblers. No. 28 Eastern Kentucky dropped eight spots from a week ago, No. 29 North Carolina fell six, and No. 30 Northern Arizona free-fell 19 spots after last week’s news that Futsum Zienasellassie and Nathan Weitz are redshirting in 2015. The last time NAU was ranked so low? A No. 30 rank in 2006, the year before current head coach Eric Heinstook over. The Lumberjacks have been in the top 10 at NCAAs in all but one year since and on the podium in all but three. Expect another shakeup this weekend as 22 of the top-30 teams are in action, along with 12 vote-receiving teams. Saturday’s Greater Louisville Classic – the site of the NCAA Championships on November 21 – will draw six top-30 teams plus five more receiving votes. Friday’s Notre Dame Invitational will feature six top-30 teams, including No. 17 New Mexico and No. 18Arizona State, and another team receiving votes. A top-15 showdown is on tap at the Washington Invitational on Friday as No. 5 Oregon meets up with No. 11UCLA and No. 12 BYU, as well as a retooled Portland team that took third at NCAAs a year ago. Princeton is also hosting a significant competition on Saturday, with a trio of top-30 teams led by No. 19Indiana. Fans can follow along with all those meets and more live on the USTFCCCA National Results Wall. It all leads up to the NCAA Championships on November 21 at E.P. "Tom" Sawyer Park in Louisville, Kentucky.
Read the full article at: www.ustfccca.org
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