Dave’s Top 25 ballot: Week 10

Last week’s “easy” week was the exact opposite this week. I erased so many decisions on my pad of paper I practically wore right through the page.

Sufficed to say, this season is crazy. There isn’t a coach I talk with these days who can’t believe what they are seeing with results. There isn’t a Top 25 voter I have chatted with who is sure of half of their ballot. It really is nuts.

This week: the top five didn’t change; five through thirteen went through some readjustments; fourteen on… chaos. Complete upheaval. I spent a couple of hours changing my mind. I thought that by casting a wider net, maybe some teams would jump up and force me to punt other teams. In fact, it only made the decision(s) harder. At one point I seriously had 30 teams I was considering for 12 spots… and I probably could have talked myself into ten more teams!

All and all… I am not satisfied my Top 25 is the best ballot it could be this week. I am too uneasy about a lot of teams, recent outcomes, and those maybe I am discounting for whatever reason. More losses are pretty much guaranteed and I will be back in the same boat each week – so I might as well get comfortable!

As always before we begin, here is a look at last week’s ballot:

1 – St. Thomas
2 – UW-Whitewater
3 – Marietta
4 – Randolph-Macon
5 – Babson
6 – Augustana
7 – Dickinson
8 – St. Norbert
9 – WPI
10 – Virginia Wesleyan
11 – Albertus Magnus
12 – Chapman
13 – St. John Fisher
14 – Emory
15 – Whitworth
16 – Wooster
17 – New York Univ.
18 – Johns Hopkins
19 – Elmhurst
20 – Chicago
21 – Illinois Wesleyan
22 – Washington Univ.
23 – Franklin & Marshall
24 – Ohio Wesleyan
25 – Catholic

And now on to this week’s ballot with some explanations for some of the moves:

1 – St. Thomas (Unchanged)

2 – UW-Whitewater (Unchanged)

3 – Marietta (Unchanged)

4 – Randolph-Macon* (Unchanged)

5 – Babson (Unchanged)

6 – Virginia Wesleyan (Up 4)
At least someone is winning. We all know the Marlins are always going to be a good team. Maybe this is the year the ODAC has two deep threats.

7 – St. Norbert (Up 1)

8 – Augustana (Down 2)
Another loss for the Vikings. The CCIW is clearly one of the toughest conferences in the country this year with even the bottom being a major threat, but Augustana has to stand up and get it done and not keep taking losses. It is already going to be hard to get at-large bids this season, you don’t want the end of the season plagued with losses to dash your hopes. Big game against Illinois Wesleyan this week – looking for the Vikings to exact some revenge on the road for the earlier loss at Rock Island or Augustana drops and IWU jumps up further!

9 – WPI* (Unchanged)
When you lose to a team I have ranked ahead of you anyway, I am not going to drop you down the poll. I expected Babson to win based on my rankings, so WPI stays in the Top 10 as a result.

10 – Dickinson (Down 3)
Ouch! I figured the Red Devils were due for another conference loss with Johns Hopkins and Franklin & Marshall (on the road) still on their schedule, but Ursinus*?! Seriously?! It was a rough Saturday in the Centennial (call is Centennial Conference Carnage), but you can’t afford to drop games against teams you should be beating (theme for this week’s blog). I realize Ursinus is vastly improved over the squad I saw in December (wasn’t pretty), but Dickinson is better than that. And again… JHU and F&M still to play before the conference tournament!

11 – Chapman (Up 1)
Stop a two game slide with a hard-fought win over Claremont-Mudd-Scripps… impressive. I pretty much had resigned the fact Chapman might lose that game because CMS is pretty good and Chapman seemed to be struggling. That win could have saved Chapman’s post-season hopes.

12 – Albertus Magnus (Down 1)

13 – St. John Fisher (Unchanged)

14 – UW-Stevens Point (Unranked)
Every time I thought about adding the Pointers to my Top 25 ballot I reminded myself they have to play Whitewater this week. If the last game is any barometer, the Pointers are going to lose. So how could I justify putting them into my Top 25 if I think they are going to lose this week? Couple of reasons: they are at least winning and Whitewater is so far their only blemish (but, Oshkosh did nearly get them the next game); they have won 11 of their last 12 and starting to take control of games again; they have Stephen Pelkofer back from injury (played 37 minutes against Platteville) and that is a very good sign for the Pointers. Oh… and I am probably one of the only voters who hadn’t had them in my Top 25 by this point.

15 – Johns Hopkins* (Up 3)
Got a big win over Franklin & Marshall* to split the season with the Diplomats and continue a 16 game winning streak (last loss was to F&M back on November 25). That also equates to a two game lead on Dickinson who the Blue Jays have already beaten. This blue-collar team isn’t backing down!

16 – Emory (Down 2)
I watch (on video) the Eagles blow through Rochester on Friday and then once again struggle against NYU* and loss on Sunday. I am pretty sure Emory is glad NYU is in their rear view mirror – but the entire UAA has been this way this season. It is a very difficult conference this season. I can’t ding Emory that much for losing to a really good team (more on NYU in a minute) when I saw them roll over the Yellow Jackets. I also take into account I haven’t talked to one single coach who has seen Emory and not spoken highly of them. Weird year.

17 – Illinois Wesleyan (Up 5)
I haven’t been that thrilled with the Titans this season, but they keep getting it done even after tough losses. There were comments that Illinois Wesleyan wasn’t a Top 25 team just a few weeks ago after a couple of losses in the CCIW. What I think we actually saw was the early signs the CCIW as going to be very difficult. Now IWU finds themselves in the conference lead by a game with Augustana coming to town this week. Talk about a statement game. If you thought the win at Rock Island was important? This week is even more important. Potential two-game lead in a very difficult conference and the chance to get the tournament through Bloomfield versus Rock Island… big, big game.

18 – Ohio Wesleyan (Up 6)
Yeah… I might be jumping a bit too much here, but the Battling Bishops seemed to have solved the can’t-win-more-than-two-games-in-a-row problem they were having last month. Ohio Wesleyan is free and clear of the NCAC including a season sweep of Wooster. In a year of chaos, Ohio Wesleyan may have found some stability at just the right time of the year.

19 – Whitworth (Down 3)
I thought Whitworth would roll through the rest of the conference schedule. I know Whitman was going to be tough, but to get blown out and not score 50 points?! Didn’t see that coming. Whitworth doesn’t seem to have a great strength of schedule this season, so they have to be careful and win the automatic bid. Losing to Whitman will only fuel hopes from those below that Whitworth is ripe for the taking. Down a couple of spots… because I am worried.

20 – Elmhurst (Down 1)
I tried to move Elmhurst down further, but I just couldn’t justify putting them behind those who are below them. Elmhurst looks like they forgot to stay focused. I know Wheaton is a good team and have mentioned the CCIW is really tough this year, but you don’t beat good teams and then drop one on the road at Wheaton. The road doesn’t get easier. North Park, North Central, and Illinois Wesleyan to wrap up the regular season – tread lightly Blue Jays or you are going to get your wings clipped.

21 – Catholic* (Up 4)
I know Catholic is on a good run right now, but I can’t move them that high up the Top 25. They have a weak SOS, apparently, and they have a looming game against Scranton* this week (if they don’t get trapped by Goucher* mid-week). I will get the chance to see the Cardinals again this week and compare them to the beginning of the season. Then, maybe, I can decide if I am smart to leave them in this range of the Top 25 or if I am low-balling them.

22 – Wooster (Down 8)
Bad time to hit a rut. The Fighting Scots have lost three of their last four and seem to be struggling when we are used to them dominating. They have probably played themselves out of controlling the NCAC tournament and could be in deeper trouble if they don’t right the ship soon. I even debated about dropping Wooster all-together, but I honestly didn’t have anyone whose resume seemed better than Wooster’s right now.

23 – New York Univ.* (Down 8)
The challenge in the UAA is going to be summed up best by the Violets and the next two on my ballot. Beat the tough team, lose to the worse teams, all on the road. Once again New York Univ. beat Emory, but once again NYU couldn’t beat Rochester. The challenge for me: I have seen NYU in person – they are darn good. The problem is I see a loss to Rochester (who has won four in a row and is tied for second with practically everyone else in the conference) and I scratch my head. It may simply come down to match-ups, but NYU has put themselves in a position where they may be too far down the regional rankings in a weak East to earn themselves an at-large bid. If they do get into the tournament, they could be one of the deep sleepers to watch out for.

24 – Washington Univ.* (Down 2)
The only reason the Bears are not out of my Top 25 ballot: they have only lost four games and they do have a very difficult SOS. Once again, Washington Univ. lost a game they shouldn’t have lost (Carnegie Mellon) and once again they beat the tougher opponent and did it handily (Case Western Reserve). There is plenty of inconsistency with the Bears, but they are playing a dangerous game. If they don’t win the UAA automatic bid (regular season title), they could end up being stuck behind a lot of good Central Region teams and get left out of the NCAA Tournament. At some point, WashU has to beat the teams they should be beating to leave themselves some wiggle room.

25 – Chicago* (Down 5)
I could almost write the same thing for WashU here for the Maroons. Believe it or not, Chicago leads the UAA – which is clearly the toughest conference in the country this year – but they once again lost a game that just doesn’t make sense. Maybe the talk the Maroons are actually a year away from being potentially a world beater are correct, but the pre-season coach’s poll also predicted Chicago would win the conference. That last part also appears to be correct. However, the only reason I moved Chicago this far down and behind WashU (despite a head-to-head win over the Bears)… six total losses for Chicago. They definitely can’t afford to lose any more games and need that AQ to make sure they make the tournament. Playing with fire in a city that has a love/hate relationship with flames.

Dropped out:

Franklin & Marshall (Previously 23)
It’s one thing to lost to a red hot Johns Hopkins teams, but to lose on the road to Washington is not good enough. I know the Diplomats struggle with Washington, especially on the road (lost to the Shoremen four of the last six years), but this season is one of those times you have to figure it out. You also can’t lose to Washington when you just lost to JHU. This is now two two-game losing streaks in seven games and it doesn’t get any easier: Ursinus, Muhlenberg, Gettysburg, and Dickinson. Buckle up F&M fans – this is going to be a very interested finish to the season.

Previous ballots:
Week 5
Week 6
Week 7
Week 8
Week 9

Dave’s Top 25 ballot: Week 9

To be honest, I decided to make it a little easier on myself this week. I realized there were plenty of losses (yet again – 12 in my ballot alone) this week, but I thought maybe I was over-thinking things recently. Maybe, just maybe, I was making the Top 25 process too complicated of late. So, I decided to go with my gut a bit more.

The results? I certainly didn’t take six hours on my ballot this time. I probably took an hour. Now, that doesn’t add in the time I think about it during the week and especially on the weekend. I might be in my car heading to or from a game and be contemplating how Wooster’s loss to Ohio Wesleyan … or Wabash … or both … affects my ballot. I might be sitting on the couch watching TV with my wife when the debate over how to deal with NYU’s split of the weekend enters my head. However, the amount of time I sat down with a pencil, pad, D3hoops.com info packet (printed), in front of my computer was only an hour this week.

Oh, the results? I made some definite moves up and down on my ballot. I took two teams out. For the first time this year a team made it back on to my ballot (two actually). But all and all… it is what it is.

I’ve said it before and I will continue to say it. This is a tough year to be a Top 25 voter. There is just so much parity, it seems, in men’s basketball this season. There is just one undefeated team (Marietta) in the country right now. Whereas on the women’s side there are five with at least three probably making the post-season undefeated. No guarantees Marietta can do that. However, as Rusty Eggen said on the Hoopsville Marathon last Thursday: it might be tough for voters, but it is great for Division III. He’s right. So while I suck up and deal and vote accordingly, you better make sure you are enjoying this season. It is well worth the price of admission (if the school even charges in the first place).

As always before we begin, here is a look at last week’s ballot:

1 – St. Thomas
2 – UW-Whitewater
3 – Augustana
4 – Marietta
5 – Randolph-Macon
6 – Chapman
7 – WPI
8 – Babson
9 – Wooster
10 – Dickinson
11 – St. Norbert
12 – Albertus Magnus
13 – Emory
14 – Virginia Wesleyan
15 – New York Univ.
16 – St. John Fisher
17 – Whitworth
18 – Washington Univ.
19 – Elmhurst
20 – William Paterson
21 – Chicago
22 – Johns Hopkins
23 – Illinois Wesleyan
24 – Franklin & Marshall
25 – Case Western Reserve

And now on to this week’s ballot with some explanations for some of the moves:

1 – St. Thomas (Unchanged)

2 – UW-Whitewater (Unchanged)

3 – Marietta (Up 1)

4 – Randolph-Macon* (Up 1)

5 – Babson (Up 3)

6 – Augustana (Down 3)
In hindsight, I probably should have moved the Vikings a little further down the poll after losing to North Park. Augustana has lost two of their last four after all. However, they are also playing in the CCIW which is one of the top two conferences this season. They also lost to a team at the bottom of their conference, on the road, who also beat North Central and Carthage in the midst of a three-game winning streak. Augustana is probably the best team in the CCIW (despite two losses), but they need to tighten their belt buckles and focus at the job at hand or the CCIW will ding them a few more times and that will keep the Vikings from enjoying any home court advantage in the NCAA tournament which will mean an earlier than expected departure in March.

7 – Dickinson (Up 3)

8 – St. Norbert (Up 3)

9 – WPI* (Down 2)
If you were surprised WPI lost to Springfield on the road, you aren’t paying attention to the NEWMAC. The top of the conference with Babson, WPI, MIT, and Springfield is tough – remember Springfield won the conference tournament last year allowing for four teams to get into the NCAA tournament (where they all laid an egg on the first Friday night) [Edit: MIT actually beat Springfield in the conference championship. My mistake. MIT’s win actually got a fourth team into the NCAA tournament]. Charlie Brock versus Chris Bartley, with the talent they both have on their teams, is an outstanding coaching match-up. I was actually watching the game while PA announcing because I didn’t want to miss it. WPI is good and they are losing games I am not surprised they are losing (especially since they are close).

10 – Virginia Wesleyan (Up 4)

11 – Albertus Magnus (Up 1)
I know. I have stated several times that the Falcons were not going to move higher than 12th on my ballot. That was their ceiling. I knew the moment I wrote their names into the 11th slot I was going to need to explain this. The explanation is actually pretty simple and has nothing to do with the Falcons (sorry): I was moving other teams around and didn’t have a team I felt comfortable putting in the 11 slot… so I moved AMC up one spot.

12 – Chapman (Down 6)
You had to know the moment I bought in to a team like Chapman they would have a rough week. Losing two games to Cal Lutheran (13-4) and Pomona-Pitzer (6-12) was tough. If the loss had been just to Cal Lutheran, not a big deal. After all, Chapman, Cal Lutheran, and Claremont-Mudd-Scripps were expected to be the class of the SCIAC this season and were all worthy of Top 25 consideration even in the preseason. But the loss to Pomona-Pitzer, especially as the second of the two losses, is the rough one. Chapman is a pretty good team. You only hope the players learned a lesson from the results and don’t let the wheels fall off.

13 – St. John Fisher (Up 3)

14 – Emory (Down 1)
I’m not going to knock Emory for their loss on the road to New York Univ.* that much. First off, it was on the road in one of the tougher places to play. Second, it was the Sunday game which can be the toughest game to play on the road in the UAA. Third, it was NYU. Fourth, Emory actually came from pretty far down late in the game to nearly pull off the comeback win. Emory seemed to have played well from what I was watching while hosting Hoopsville that afternoon. Not going to ding Emory for that loss too much. (By the way, Emory plays five of their last seven games at home including NYU, Wash U*, and Chicago* – home cooking could be pretty good!)

15 – Whitworth (Up 2)

16 – Wooster (Down 7)
Losing for the second time this season to Ohio Wesleyan is one thing. Losing to Wabash, a team you beat by 29 points earlier in the season, is unacceptable. I know Wabash is a decent team (12-7) and I know the game was on the road. But a Top 25 team doesn’t lose the second game in a row to a team to a team they should beat handily. For some reason Ohio Wesleyan has Wooster’s number (season sweep), but Wabash had lost three in a row including Oberlin (8-11) and Wittenberg* (7-12). No excuses. I probably should have punished Wooster more… but it was a road game, I told myself.

17 – New York Univ.* (Down 2)
I would have moved the Violets ahead of Emory thanks to their win, but the loss to Rochester on Friday is a problem. I realize that Rochester is probably better than their record indicates and they are certainly well coached, but the Yellow Jackets were at the bottom of the UAA coming into that game with just one conference win (Carnegie Mellon) and the game as a HOME game for NYU! Where they looking ahead to Emory on Sunday? Where they dismissing the challenge Rochester could pose? I have no idea, but if they were dismissing Rochester as a threat they haven’t paying attention to how the Yellow Jackets played at Chicago and at Wash U recently. Bad loss that at least was made up for by beating Emory on Sunday.

18 – Johns Hopkins* (Up 5)

19 – Elmhurst (Unchanged)
By my rankings the loss to Augustana was expected (you can’t punish a team you have ranked behind another if they lost in a head-to-head with the other team, right?). Elmhurst then beat Millikin the next game. The only reason I didn’t move Elmhurst up my ballot (since they lost by just four to Augustana) was because the Vikings then lost to North Park on Saturday. There is a trickle-down affect sometimes. Elmhurst didn’t move as a result of Augustana’s trickle-down.

20 – Chicago* (Up 1)

21 – Illinois Wesleyan (Up 1)

22 – Washington Univ.* (Down 4)
The Bears are not as good as the beginning of the season seemed to indicate. Remember this was the number one team in the country around Christmas! I am not saying Wash U isn’t a good team. We know they have one of the best coaches in the game, but they don’t have the experience or talent level we have grown accustomed to in St. Louis. To be honest, we probably fell for the smoke and mirrors a little because it was the beginning of seeing how much parity there is in basketball this season and they at least showed they could get some big wins. However, the conference has exposed them and if they didn’t find some sort of comeback in them on Sunday they would have been blown out yet again. One thing I am keeping in mind, though, when it comes to Wash U: they have lost three games this season all in conference and the UAA is probably the best conference in the country this season in terms of depth (with the CCIW also making a strong argument). The problem for Wash U is they can’t afford to take many more losses or they are going to be deep in the regional rankings making it difficult to get to the table for an at-large bid.

23 – Franklin & Marshall* (Up 1)

24 – Ohio Wesleyan (Unranked)
Welcome back to the Top 25, Battling Bishops. How will you disappoint me now? I am just kidding. No team is disappoint this season, but Ohio Wesleyan is the first of two teams to reenter my Top 25 ballot this season. The win over Wooster certainly was a statement win (including the fact they swept the Scots this season). Though, the close win to Hiram certainly gave me pause. But I went with my gut on this one. On paper, the Battling Bishops don’t have a very hard finish to the season which means for the first time in a long time the NCAC tournament may have to go through Delaware, Ohio!

25 – Catholic* (Unranked)
I have been apprehensive about the Cardinals for several weeks. I wasn’t blown away with Catholic at the beginning of the season. They played okay at the Hoopsville Classic and then lost to DeSales* and St. Vincent – not games they should be losing. But since the loss to the Bearcats, Catholic has rattled off 11 straight victories and have had some dominating wins in that stretch (including by 40 to Moravian Saturday). Maybe Steve Howes has his team clicking at just the right time. Well until maybe February 11 when Catholic has to travel to Goucher – my alma mater. Maybe the Gophers will finally rise up and beat their “rival” for the second time in two seasons. Eh… never mind.

Dropped out:

William Paterson (Previously 20)
I am not going to repeat what I said on Sunday’s Hoopsville except to paraphrase: I don’t think the NJAC is as great as the coaches in the conference thinks it is. There are certainly some good teams and the bottom is closer to the top than many conferences, but there aren’t any great teams in this conference. Take for example the fact William Paterson lost to Richard Stockton who had just lost to TCNJ three nights prior. I know they all have good records, but WP had to make a statement with the game against Stockton and instead lost at home in a game that would have put the Pioneers firmly in control of the conference lead.

Case Western Reserve (Previously 25)
I previously stated that the UAA was probably the best conference in the country this year, so seeing the Spartans lose on the road to Chicago and then come back to beat Wash U wasn’t surprising. And because of those results, like Emory and NYU, I probably shouldn’t have pulled them out of my Top 25. However, they have now lost two of the last four and I had them in the 25th slot – the bubble. I can’t keep them in the bubble spot, even if they are tied for the top of the UAA, if they have lost two in as many weeks. Case Western Reserve is the story of the UAA this season (and there are many stories), but the rematch with Chicago and Wash U this weekend at home is going to be the key to their season.

Previous ballots:

Week 5
Week 6
Week 7
Week 8

NCAA regional rankings, Week 3

These are the final NCAA regional rankings we will get to see. There is an additional ranking made on Sunday, but it is not released to the public.

Need to know more about the regional rankings process and what they mean? Need to know more about the NCAA Tournament? Check out our NCAA Tournament FAQ.

  • Second week’s regional rankings
  • First week’s regional rankings
  • The first record is Division III record, followed by overall.
    Through games of Sunday, Feb. 23.

    NCAA Division III men’s basketball championships handbook

    Men’s rankings
    Atlantic Region – NCAA data sheet
    1 SUNY-Purchase 23-2 23-2
    2 Richard Stockton 21-4 21-4
    3 Staten Island 24-2 24-2
    4 William Paterson 20-5 20-5
    5 Rutgers-Newark 19-7 19-7
    6 Mount St. Mary 20-5 20-5

    East – NCAA data sheet
    1 Brockport State 21-3 22-3
    2 Plattsburgh State 21-4 21-4
    3 Geneseo State 19-5 20-5
    4 Hobart 19-6 19-6
    5 NYU 16-8 16-8
    6 Skidmore 16-9 16-9

    Great Lakes – NCAA data sheet
    1 Wooster 21-2 22-3
    2 Hope 18-5 19-6
    3 Bethany 20-4 21-4
    4 Mount Union 20-5 20-5
    5 DePauw 17-7 18-7
    6 Wittenberg 19-6 19-6
    7 Ohio Wesleyan 19-6 19-6

    Mid-Atlantic – NCAA data sheet
    1 Cabrini 23-1 23-1
    2 Scranton 22-3 22-3
    3 Wesley 20-2 22-2
    4 Dickinson 20-5 20-5
    5 Stevenson 18-7 18-7
    6 Messiah 19-5 19-5
    7 Alvernia 18-7 18-7
    8 Mary Washington 18-5 20-5
    9 St. Mary’s (Md.) 15-7 18-7

    Midwest – NCAA data sheet
    1 Washington U. 22-2 22-2
    2 Illinois Wesleyan 22-3 22-3
    3 Wheaton (Ill.) 17-8 17-8
    4 Augustana 19-6 19-6
    5 St. Norbert 21-1 22-1
    6 Carthage 15-8 16-9
    7 Rose-Hulman 20-5 20-5
    8 Chicago 14-9 15-9

    Northeast – NCAA data sheet
    1 Amherst 22-2 22-3
    2 Williams 21-3 22-3
    3 Babson 20-5 20-5
    4 Eastern Connecticut 20-5 20-5
    5 WPI 22-3 22-3
    6 Springfield 18-6 19-6
    7 Bowdoin 19-5 19-5
    8 Albertus Magnus 23-1 23-2
    9 Nichols 20-5 20-5
    10 Rhode Island College 17-8 17-8
    11 Middlebury 16-8 17-8

    South – NCAA data sheet
    1 Randolph-Macon 20-5 20-5
    2 Emory 17-7 17-7
    3 Virgina Wesleyan 18-6 19-6
    4 Texas-Dallas 22-3 22-3
    5 Centre 17-3 20-4
    6 Birmingham-Southern 16-9 16-9
    7 Guilford 17-8 17-8
    8 Trinity (Texas) 16-9 16-9

    West – NCAA data sheet
    1 UW-Stevens Point 24-1 24-1
    2 UW-Whitewater 22-3 22-3
    3 St. Thomas 21-4 21-4
    4 St. Olaf 20-5 20-5
    5 Whitworth 20-5 20-5
    6 Dubuque 18-4 21-4
    7 Claremont-Mudd-Scripps 17-3 19-5
    8 Pomona-Pitzer 18-5 18-7
    9 Augsburg 18-7 18-7

    Women’s

    The first record is in-region record, followed by overall record.

     

    • NCAA Division III women’s basketball championships handbook
      Atlantic
      1 Montclair State 23-2 23-2
      2 York (Pa.) 21-2 23-2
      3 Christopher Newport 19-4 21-4
      4 Catholic 19-5 19-5
      5 Salisbury 15-8 17-8
      6 Baruch 19-7 19-7

      Central
      1 Washington U. 22-2 22-2
      2 Carthage 21-3 22-3
      3 UW-Whitewater 22-3 22-3
      4 UW-Oshkosh 21-3 22-3
      5 Wisconsin Lutheran 22-3 22-3
      6 Illinois Wesleyan 17-7 17-7
      7 Wheaton (Ill.) 16-6 19-6
      8 Cornell 20-3 20-3

      East
      1 Ithaca 19-4 21-4
      2 Vassar 20-5 20-5
      3 Hartwick 19-4 21-4
      4 Plattsburgh State 20-5 20-5
      5 NYU 19-5 19-5
      6 William Smith 19-6 19-6

      Great Lakes
      1 DePauw 24-1 24-1
      2 Hope 24-0 25-0
      3 Thomas More 25-0 25-0
      4 Baldwin Wallace 20-5 20-5
      5 John Carroll 20-3 21-3
      6 Ohio Northern 21-4 21-4
      7 Transylvania 22-2 23-2
      8 Olivet 20-2 22-3

      Mid-Atlantic
      1 FDU-Florham 24-0 25-0
      2 Scranton 22-3 22-3
      3 Haverford 20-3 21-3
      4 Cabrini 21-4 21-4
      5 Moravian 19-6 19-6
      6 Lebanon Valley 20-5 20-5
      7 Elizabethtown 20-4 20-4
      8 DeSales 19-6 19-6

      Northeast
      1 Tufts 24-1 24-1
      2 Amherst 23-2 23-2
      3 Bowdoin 21-4 21-4
      4 Williams 20-5 20-5
      5 New England 23-2 23-2
      6 Roger Williams 20-5 20-5
      7 Rhode Island College 17-8 17-8
      8 Eastern Connecticut 17-8 17-8
      9 Emmanuel 19-6 19-6
      10 Southern Maine 18-7 18-7
      11 Wheaton (Mass.) 19-6 19-6
      12 Castleton State 22-3 22-3

      South
      1 Ferrum 22-2 23-2
      2 Rhodes 21-3 21-3
      3 Texas-Tyler 22-3 22-3
      4 Maryville (Tenn.) 19-5 20-5
      5 Randolph-Macon 20-4 20-5
      6 Eastern Mennonite 20-4 21-4
      7 Texas-Dallas 20-5 20-5
      8 Trinity (Texas) 15-7 18-7
      9 Centre 16-8 16-9

      West
      1 Whitman 20-0 25-0
      2 Saint Mary’s (Minn.) 23-2 23-2
      3 George Fox 20-3 22-3
      4 Concordia-Moorhead 20-4 21-4
      5 St. Thomas 21-4 21-4
      6 Chapman 20-3 20-5
      7 Whitworth 15-5 18-7
      8 Claremont-Mudd-Scripps 18-3 22-3

      Regional score reporting forms (including SOS) below:
      Atlantic | Central | East | Great Lakes | Mid-Atlantic | Northeast | South | West

    NCAA regional rankings, week 3

    Virginia Wesleyan athletics photo

    Virginia Wesleyan moves into the top spot in the ODAC tournament seedings and the South Region rankings this week.

    The men’s and women’s regional rankings have both been released.

    Need to know more about the regional rankings process and what they mean? Need to know more about the NCAA Tournament? Check out our NCAA Tournament FAQ.

    Through games of Sunday, Feb. 17.

    The first record is in-region record, followed by overall.

    • NCAA Division III men’s basketball championships handbook
      Men’s rankings
      Atlantic Region
      NCAA data sheet
      1 Ramapo 19-3 21-4
      2 SUNY-Old Westbury 21-2 22-3
      3 Rutgers-Newark 18-6 19-6
      4 Richard Stockton 19-6 19-6
      5 SUNY-Purchase 20-5 20-5

      EastNCAA data sheet
      1 Rochester 20-3 21-3
      2 Cortland State 21-3 21-4
      3 Stevens 20-4 22-4
      4 Plattsburgh State 18-6 18-7
      5 Hobart 18-6 19-6
      6 Oswego State 18-7 18-7

      Great LakesNCAA data sheet
      1 Wooster 20-4 20-4
      2 Ohio Wesleyan 19-4 19-5
      3 St. Vincent 18-3 20-5
      4 Thomas More 20-3 21-4
      5 Capital 19-4 19-6
      6 Calvin 18-1 22-3

      Mid-AtlanticNCAA data sheet
      1 Alvernia 21-4 21-4
      2 Catholic 19-3 22-3
      3 Albright 20-5 20-5
      4 St. Mary’s (Md.) 17-3 22-3
      5 Wesley 16-3 19-6
      6 Scranton 19-6 19-6
      7 DeSales 19-5 20-5
      8 Salisbury 15-5 18-7
      9 Franklin & Marshall 16-5 19-6

      MidwestNCAA data sheet
      1 Illinois Wesleyan 18-3 21-3
      2 Washington U. 18-5 19-5
      3 Wheaton (Ill.) 16-5 19-5
      4 North Central (Ill.) 19-3 21-3
      5 Transylvania 18-5 19-6
      6 Rose-Hulman 21-3 22-3
      7 St. Norbert 18-5 18-5
      8 Augustana 16-7 17-7

      NortheastNCAA data sheet
      1 Amherst 23-2 23-2
      2 WPI 23-2 23-2
      3 Williams 20-3 22-3
      4 Rhode Island College 22-3 22-3
      5 Middlebury 19-2 22-2
      6 MIT 19-4 20-4
      7 Springfield 18-7 18-7
      8 Brandeis 17-7 17-7
      9 Curry 18-7 18-7
      10 Westfield State 19-4 21-4
      11 Eastern Connecticut 18-4 18-7
      12 Tufts 16-5 17-8

      SouthNCAA data sheet
      1 Virginia Wesleyan 16-5 19-6
      2 Hampden-Sydney 18-3 22-3
      3 Mary Hardin-Baylor 21-4 21-4
      4 Christopher Newport 17-5 18-5
      5 Emory 17-6 17-6
      6 Concordia (Texas) 18-4 20-5
      7 Texas-Dallas 19-6 19-6
      8 Randolph 14-5 20-5

      WestNCAA data sheet
      1 St. Thomas 24-1 24-1
      2 UW-Stevens Point 21-4 21-4
      3 UW-Whitewater 20-4 21-4
      4 Whitworth 21-3 22-3
      5 Buena Vista 18-6 19-6
      6 UW-Stout 18-6 19-6
      7 Concordia-Moorhead 18-6 18-7
      8 Augsburg 19-6 19-6
      9 Whitman 15-6 18-7

      Regional score reporting forms (including SOS) below:
      Atlantic | East | Great Lakes | Middle Atlantic | Midwest | Northeast | South | West

      Women’s
      AtlanticNCAA data sheet
      1 Montclair State 25-0 25-0
      2 Catholic 21-1 24-1
      3 Baruch 23-2 24-2
      4 Marymount 19-4 21-4
      5 William Paterson 18-6 19-6
      6 Mary Washington 17-6 19-6
      7 York (Pa.) 15-6 19-6
      8 TCNJ 17-8 18-8

      CentralNCAA data sheet
      1 Cornell 22-1 22-1
      2 UW-Whitewater 18-4 20-5
      3 Washington U. 18-4 19-5
      4 Carthage 18-4 20-4
      5 UW-Oshkosh 17-5 20-5
      6 Illinois Wesleyan 15-5 17-7
      7 Monmouth 18-4 19-4
      8 UW-Stevens Point 19-5 20-5

      EastNCAA data sheet
      1 Ithaca 21-2 23-2
      2 Rochester 19-5 19-5
      3 New Paltz State 22-3 22-3
      4 Geneseo State 18-6 19-6
      5 Vassar 19-4 21-4
      6 Oswego State 17-7 17-8
      7 St. Lawrence 16-8 17-8
      8 Hartwick 15-6 18-7

      Great LakesNCAA data sheet
      1 Ohio Northern 23-0 24-1
      2 DePauw 19-0 25-0
      3 Hope 21-1 24-1
      4 Calvin 18-1 22-2
      5 Thomas More 24-1 24-1
      6 La Roche 21-2 22-2
      7 Otterbein 19-5 20-5
      8 Franklin 19-4 21-4

      Mid-AtlanticNCAA data sheet
      1 Messiah 20-2 22-3
      2 Widener 20-4 21-4
      3 Moravian 19-5 20-5
      4 Scranton 17-6 18-7
      5 FDU-Florham 21-3 22-3
      6 Swarthmore 18-5 19-6
      7 Lebanon Valley 21-4 21-4
      8 (King’s) 19-5 20-5
      Although the NCAA posting left this last spot blank, we believe this is King’s.

      NortheastNCAA data sheet
      1 Amherst 23-1 24-1
      2 Tufts 22-2 23-2
      3 Babson 22-1 23-2
      4 Southern Maine 22-1 24-1
      5 Bridgewater State 21-3 21-3
      6 Williams 20-4 21-4
      7 Smith 22-3 22-3
      8 Castleton State 23-1 24-1
      9 University of New England 21-4 21-4
      10 Emmanuel 20-3 20-5

      SouthNCAA data sheet
      1 Ferrum 22-3 22-3
      2 Christopher Newport 22-2 23-2
      3 Louisiana College 20-3 21-3
      4 Maryville (Tenn.) 22-3 22-3
      5 Eastern Mennonite 17-3 19-5
      6 Howard Payne 21-4 21-4
      7 Trinity (Texas) 21-4 21-4
      8 Emory 21-3 21-3

      WestNCAA data sheet
      1 Simpson 19-1 23-2
      2 Lewis and Clark 19-2 23-2
      3 St. Thomas 20-4 20-5
      4 Concordia-Moorhead 20-4 20-5
      5 Cal Lutheran 18-4 21-4
      6 Whitman 16-3 20-4
      7 Chapman 17-4 19-5
      8 Minnesota-Morris 17-0 18-7

      The first record is in-region record, followed by overall record.

    • NCAA Division III women’s basketball championships handbook

      Regional score reporting forms (including SOS) below:
      Atlantic | Central | East | Great Lakes | Mid-Atlantic | Northeast | South | West

    NCAA Regional rankings, Week 2

    Calvin is getting dumped on in the regional rankings so far this season.

    The men’s and women’s regional rankings have both been released.

    Need to know more about the regional rankings process and what they mean? Need to know more about the NCAA Tournament? Check out our NCAA Tournament FAQ.

    Through games of Sunday, Feb. 10.

    The first record is in-region record, followed by overall.

    • NCAA Division III men’s basketball championships handbookMen’s rankings
      Atlantic Region
      NCAA data sheet
      1 SUNY-Old Westbury 20-1 21-3
      2 Ramapo 18-2 20-3
      3 Rutgers-Newark 17-6 18-6
      4 Richard Stockton 17-5 17-5
      5 SUNY-Purchase 17-5 17-5

      EastNCAA data sheet
      1 Rochester 19-2 20-2
      2 Cortland State 19-2 19-3
      3 Stevens 18-3 20-3
      4 Hobart 15-6 16-6
      5 Plattsburgh State 15-6 15-7
      6 Ithaca 14-7 15-7

      Great LakesNCAA data sheet
      1 Wooster 19-3 19-3
      2 Ohio Wesleyan 17-4 17-5
      3 Thomas More 19-2 20-3
      4 Capital 17-4 17-6
      5 Saint Vincent 16-3 18-5
      6 Calvin 16-1 20-3

      Mid-AtlanticNCAA data sheet
      1 Alvernia 19-4 19-4
      2 Catholic 17-3 20-3
      3 St. Mary’s (Md.) 16-2 21-2
      4 Albright 18-5 18-5
      5 Wesley 16-2 19-5
      6 Scranton 17-6 17-6
      7 Cabrini 17-4 19-5
      8 DeSales 17-5 18-5
      9 Dickinson 15-6 17-6

      MidwestNCAA data sheet
      1 Illinois Wesleyan 17-3 20-3
      2 Washington U. 17-4 18-4
      3 Wheaton (Ill.) 15-5 18-5
      4 North Central (Ill.) 18-3 20-3
      5 Transylvania 17-4 18-5
      6 Rose-Hulman 20-2 21-2
      7 Augustana 15-7 16-7
      8 St. Norbert 16-5 16-5

      NortheastNCAA data sheet
      1 WPI 22-1 22-1
      2 Amherst 21-2 21-2
      3 Williams 18-3 20-3
      4 Middlebury 18-1 21-1
      5 Rhode Island College 20-3 20-3
      6 MIT 16-4 17-4
      7 Brandeis 16-6 16-6
      8 Springfield 16-7 16-7
      9 Curry 16-6 16-6
      10 Westfield State 17-4 19-4
      11 Eastern Connecticut 15-4 15-7
      12 Albertus Magnus 20-2 20-3

      SouthNCAA data sheet
      1 Hampden-Sydney 17-2 21-2
      2 Mary Hardin-Baylor 20-3 20-3
      3 Emory 15-6 15-6
      4 Virginia Wesleyan 14-5 17-6
      5 Concordia (Texas) 16-4 18-5
      6 Christopher Newport 14-5 15-5
      7 Randolph 13-4 19-4
      8 Texas-Dallas 17-6 17-6

      WestNCAA data sheet
      1 St. Thomas 23-1 23-1
      2 UW-Stevens Point 19-4 19-4
      3 UW-Whitewater 18-4 19-4
      4 Whitworth 19-3 20-3
      5 Buena Vista 16-6 17-6
      6 UW-Stout 17-5 18-5
      7 Concordia-Moorhead 17-6 17-7
      8 Whitman 13-6 16-7
      9 Augsburg 17-6 17-6

      Regional score reporting forms (including SOS) below:
      Atlantic  |  East  |  Great Lakes  |  Middle Atlantic  |  Midwest  |  Northeast  |  South  |  West

      Women’s
      Atlantic Region
      1 Montclair State 23-0 23-0
      2 Catholic 19-1 22-1
      3 Baruch 21-2 22-2
      4 Marymount 18-4 20-4
      5 William Paterson 17-6 18-6
      6 Mary Washington 15-6 17-6
      7 York (Pa.) 14-5 18-5
      8 TCNJ 15-7 16-7

      Central
      1 Cornell 20-1 20-1
      2 Washington U. 17-3 18-4
      3 UW-Whitewater 16-4 18-5
      4 UW-Oshkosh 16-4 19-4
      5 Carthage 17-4 19-4
      6 UW-Superior 17-5 18-6
      7 Monmouth 17-4 18-4
      8 UW-Stevens Point 17-5 18-5

      East
      1 Ithaca 19-2 20-2
      2 Rochester 17-5 17-5
      3 New Paltz State 21-2 21-2
      4 St. Lawrence 16-6 17-6
      5 Vassar 17-4 19-4
      6 Geneseo State 15-6 16-6
      7 Oswego State 15-6 15-7
      8 Hartwick 14-5 17-6

      Great Lakes
      1 DePauw 17-0 23-0
      2 Ohio Northern 21-0 22-1
      3 Calvin 17-0 21-1
      4 Thomas More 22-1 22-1
      5 Hope 19-1 22-1
      6 La Roche 19-2 20-2
      7 Mount Union 17-5 18-5
      8 Otterbein 17-5 18-5

      Mid-Atlantic
      1 Messiah 19-1 21-2
      2 FDU-Florham 20-2 21-2
      3 Moravian 19-3 20-3
      4 Swarthmore 17-4 18-5
      5 Widener 18-4 19-4
      6 Scranton 15-6 16-7
      7 Gettysburg 17-5 17-6
      8 Juniata 16-7 16-7

      Northeast
      1 Amherst 21-1 22-1
      2 Tufts 21-1 22-1
      3 Babson 20-1 21-2
      4 Southern Maine 20-1 22-1
      5 Bridgewater State 18-3 18-3
      6 Williams 18-4 19-4
      7 Smith 20-3 20-3
      8 Emmanuel 18-3 18-5
      9 Western Connecticut 16-6 16-6
      10 U. New England 18-4 18-4

      South
      1 Ferrum 21-2 21-2
      2 Christopher Newport 20-2 21-2
      3 Louisiana College 19-2 20-2
      4 Maryville (Tenn.) 20-3 20-3
      5 Eastern Mennonite 15-3 17-5
      6 Howard Payne 20-3 20-3
      7 Trinity (Texas) 19-4 19-4
      8 Emory 19-3 19-3

      West
      1 Simpson 18-0 22-1
      2 Lewis and Clark 17-2 21-2
      3 Cal Lutheran 17-3 20-3
      4 St. Thomas 18-4 18-5
      5 Whitman 14-3 18-4
      6 Chapman 16-4 18-5
      7 Minnesota-Morris 15-0 16-7
      8 Concordia-Moorhead 18-4 18-5

      The first record is in-region record, followed by overall record.

    • NCAA Division III women’s basketball championships handbookNot yet published.Regional score reporting forms (including SOS) below:
      Atlantic | Central | East | Great Lakes | Mid-Atlantic | Northeast | South | West