Top 25 News and Notes–Week 12

This week is the final week of the regular season for the great majority of D3 teams. Most conferences hold their post-season tournament next week, with the NCAA Tournament beginning the following week. I thought this might be a good time to catch up with last years Final Four teams.

Men’s 2007 champion Amherst sits atop the men’s poll for the third straight week and fifth this season. The Lord Jeffs have completed an unbeaten NESCAC season, finishing a full three games clear of their nearest competitors, and for the fourth consecutive year will be the top seed in the NESCAC Championship. Amherst sits at 22-2 overall, with their only D3 loss at #6 Brandeis back in early December, and hosts Colby to open the conference tournament.

Virginia Wesleyan, the 2006 champions and 2007 runners-up, have now won four straight games and check in at #19 in this week’s men’s poll. The Marlins are 13-4 in the ODAC, in second place, trailing #13 Guilford by two games in the loss column, and tied (also in the loss column) with Randolph-Macon. The Marlins finish their regular season on Saturday hosting Lynchburg, before advancing to the ODAC Championships at Salem, VA.

Both the men’s and women’s squads from Washington U. reached the Final Four last year, with the women falling in the final and the men winning the third-place game. The men’s team started this season as the #1 team, but lost two of their first four games, falling to #12 before recovering to their current ranking of #4. The Bears currently lead the UAA by a game at 9-2, and as the UAA has no post-season tournament, the league title is still up for grabs. Wash U. still has three league games remaining, starting with a matchup with second-place and sixth-ranked Brandeis Friday in St. Louis.

Last year’s fourth-place finisher, Wooster, knocked off arch-rival Wittenberg this week, clinching the top seed in the NCAC tournament for the fourth straight year, and avenging one of their two D3 losses (the other was at Lake Erie back in November.) With the win, the #12 Scots reached the 20-win plateau for the 12th straight year.

2007 women’s champion DePauw sits at #8 in this week’s poll with an overall record of 20-3. Of their three losses, one was to a quasi-scholarship D3 provisional team (Birmingham-Southern), and the other two were to teams currently in the top 5 (#3 Thomas More and #5 Messiah), both before the New Year. As the BSC loss does not count in the SCAC standings, the Tigers hold down the conference lead at 12-0, two losses better than #25 Oglethorpe and 2003 NCAA champion Trinity (TX) . The Tigers and Stormy Petrels meet this Sunday in a game that will influence the seeding in the upcoming SCAC tournament in Conway, AR.

The Bears of Washington U., runners-up in 2007 and champions for four straight years from 1998 through 2001, have had an up-and-down season. They sit at 16-6 overall after losing at Emory this past week, a loss that cost them their position in the Top 25 as well as a chance at sole possession of the UAA lead. At 8-3 in conference, the Bears are part of a four-way logjam atop the standings with three games remaining.

Preseason #1 and last year’s third-place finisher Mary Washington lost their first CAC game of the season this week at St. Mary’s, but recovered to wax second-place and then-#22 ranked Marymount by 31 points on Saturday. The sixth-ranked Eagles are 21-2 overall and lead the CAC with a 13-1 record, one game ahead of the Saints with two to play. UMW’s only other loss this season was in December at the hands of #4 UW-Whitewater on a neutral court in California.

The news is not so good for last year’s fourth-place finisher, NYU. After starting the season with twelve straight wins and reaching #3 in the poll, the Violets have dropped 8 of their last 10 to sink to 14-8 overall and just 3-8 in the UAA, leading only winless Carnegie Mellon. Of all of last year’s Final Four teams, it looks like the Violets are the most likely to miss out on this year’s tournament. Still, they can exact a measure of revenge, as their final three games are all against co-leaders of the UAA (Chicago, Wash U. , and Brandeis).

Debutantes:
Women: none this week.
Men: Not really a debutant, per se, but nevertheless congratulations to #2 Centre, which this week became the 39th men’s program to attract at least one #1 vote.

Streakers:
Women: Third-ranked Thomas More has been in the Top 10 for ten consecutive weeks. #15 Tufts, #16 Medaille, and #19 Rochester are each ranked for the tenth straight time. Longer ranking streaks belong to #12 Southern Maine (90 weeks) and #9 McMurry (40 weeks.)
Men: Guilford, the lucky #13 this week, has now received votes in 25 consecutive polls. Third-ranked Hope is Top 10 team for the tenth straight week, while #20 UW-Oshkosh is ranked for the 10th week in a row.

Milestones:
Women: Unbeaten and #2-ranked Howard Payne has now received votes in fifty polls, while Chapman has a reached the 25-poll votegetting threshold. Other voting milestones were achieved by #5 Messiah (120 polls), #21 Lake Forest and Salem State (70 each.) Tenth-ranked Illinois Wesleyan is a Top 25 team for the 25th time. #19 Rochester is ranked for the 70th week, while #16 Medaille (20) and #15 Tufts (10) also reached ranking milestones. Finally, this week marks the tenth Top 10 appearance by #3 Thomas More.
Men: Top-ranked Amherst is a member of the Top 10 for the 80th time. #16 St. Thomas has been ranked 60 times, while #22 Occidental has received votes 60 times. #13 Guilford reached two milestones this week, their 25th appearance among the votegetters, and their 20th week as a ranked team.

High-Water Marks:
Women: Thomas More remained unbeaten and moved up to a new high ranking of #3 this week. #14 Amherst also reached a new poll high, while previous highs were matched by #2 Howard Payne and #10 Illinois Wesleyan.
Men: For the second straight week both #2 Centre and #17 Ursinus reached new highest-ever perches in the poll. #11 Plattsburgh St. matched their all-time high, set earlier this season.

Movers and Shakers:
Women: UW-Stevens Point knocked off then-#3 UW-Whitewater as part of a 2-0 week, and scored the week’s largest gain (120 points.) The biggest fall was recorded by #19 Rochester, which lost at Brandeis and discarded 136 points and six poll placements. Other downward movers included NWC compatriots #18 George Fox and #22 Puget Sound, which each lost 129 points and six slots.
Men: Stop me if you’ve heard this before… UW-Stevens Point knocked off then-#2 UW-Whitewater as part of a 2-0 week, and scored the week’s largest gain (100 points.) The biggest fall was recorded by #14 Rochester, which lost at Brandeis (and at NYU in double overtime) and discarded 179 points and eight poll placements. Joining Rochester in free-fall mode was #23 UW-Platteville, which lost 159 points and seven slots after an 0-2 week.

8 thoughts on “Top 25 News and Notes–Week 12

  1. A small NESCAC nit-pick to your stellar work, David: their regular season is actually complete, so Amherst’s match-up with Colby is a conference tournament quarterfinal, not the regular-season finale.

  2. Thanks, Reinhold; I was confused about that as you probably could tell. I’ve corrected the text.

  3. I don’t want to jinx any undefeated teams but I was wanting to know in one year whats the most amount of undefeated teams we’ve had in the NCAA playoffs, men or women?

  4. Interesting question.

    From a short-term standpoint for men only, there have only been two teams who have entered the NCAA tournament undefeated in the last five years — Lawrence two years ago and St. John Fisher the year before that. I’d have to look at the women’s field to see if there have been more than three undefeated teams in the tournament at any point.

  5. As a quick-and-dirty answer for the last 8 years, we can look to the last regular season poll from each year, since the poll is released immediately prior to the start of the tournament, and take it as a given that an undefeated team would have been ranked.
    2007: none
    2006: Lawrence men
    2005: Fisher men
    2004: Bowdoin women
    2003: Hope women, Hardin-Simmons women
    2002: Wash U. women
    2001: none
    2000: Wash U. women, Eau Claire women

    Of those, the 2000 Wash U. women were the only ones to emerge with the trophy.

  6. Although it doesn’t exactly fit the definition of “streakers” that I use in this column, I want to give a special shout out to my friends down at Wittenberg. The men’s team presently has a record of 15-8, which guarantees that the Tigers will record a winning season (if they were to lose out, including a first-round NCAA loss, their record would be 15-12.) 2007-08 is therefore the 40th straight winning season for the program, and the fifty-second consecutive non-losing season. The Tigers, D3’s winningest program with 1,574 all-time wins (more than 100 more than second-place and archrival Wooster), last suffered the ignominy of a losing season in 1956.

    More information on the incredible history of Wittenberg basketball can be accessed from the Wittenberg record book (PDF), available at their website. http://www4.wittenberg.edu/news/athletics/mbasketball/index.html.

  7. I want to say that in 1995 Hope, Manchester and UW Platteville all entered the D3 tournament unbeaten.

    But I’m not 100% certain that is true.

  8. Hope, Manchester and UW Platteville did all enter the men’s tournament unbeaten 1995.

    Confirmed with a little research, this is the most I can remember on the men’s side.

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