COLUMBUS, Ohio — Ohio State moved up one spot to No. 3 in the latest Associated Press college football poll released Sunday.
The Buckeyes beat the Maryland Terrapins 37-17 on Saturday. Ohio State moved to 5-0 on the season.
The Texas Longhorns were previously ranked No. 3, but lost to Oklahoma, allowing the Buckeyes to move up.
Ohio State was sluggish in the first half against Maryland, but dominated in the second half. Star wide receiver Marvin Harrison Jr. went for 163 yards on eight catches and a touchdown. Quarterback Kyle McCord tossed for a career-high 320 yards and two touchdowns on the day.
“It was like one of those things — OK, what’s going on here?” Ohio State coach Ryan Day said of the sluggish start. “But that’s the game, and you got to respond. So I thought we did respond well in the second half. Good rhythm.”
Chip Trayanum was the main running back for the Buckeyes with TreVeyon Henderson sidelined with an undisclosed injury. Trayanum was mostly bottled up by the Terps, carrying 20 times for 61 yards. His best run was a scurry around the right end for a 4-yard TD in the third quarter.
The Buckeyes go on the road to Purdue before they play No. 6 Penn State in a top-10 matchup in two weeks.
Oklahoma moved up to No. 5 in The Associated Press college football poll Sunday, Miami's late-game gaffe nearly cost the 25th-ranked Hurricanes a spot in rankings and six basketball blue bloods made some history.
No. 1 Georgia, coming off its best game of the season, a rout of Kentucky, regained some of the first-place votes it lost in the AP Top 25 last week when it needed a late rally to stay unbeaten at Auburn.
The Bulldogs got 50 first-place votes after 35 last week. No. 2 Michigan received 11 first-place votes as the Wolverines roll along unbeaten and untested.
No. 3 Ohio State and No. 4 Florida State each moved up a spot and received a first-place vote.
Oklahoma jumped seven after beating Texas on Saturday to re-enter the top 10 for the first time since mid-September of last year, when it started tumbling toward a 6-7 season.
The Longhorns slipped six spots to No. 9.
No. 6 Penn State held its spot, as did No. 7 Washington and No. 8 Oregon a week before their Pac-12 showdown.
USC dropped a spot to No. 10 after escaping with a three-overtime victory against Arizona. The Trojans have fallen three straight weeks, despite remaining unbeaten.
Miami managed to hang on to a spot in the rankings, dropping eight places after losing for the first time this season.
The Hurricanes had Saturday’s most painful loss, not to mention a candidate for one of the worst in program history.
In position to kneel out the clock with a lead against Georgia Tech, the Hurricanes instead called a running play, fumbled the ball away with 24 seconds left and then watched as the Yellow Jackets went 74 yards in four plays for the winning score with a second left on the clock.
HOOP DREAMS
The traditional basketball powerhouses continue to shine on the gridiron in 2022.
The top six schools by appearances in the AP men’s college basketball poll are Kentucky, North Carolina, Duke, Kansas, UCLA and Louisville.
For the first time in the 87-year history of the AP football poll, all of those schools are ranked at the same time: North Carolina is No. 12, Louisville is 14th, Duke is No. 17, UCLA is 18th, Kansas is No. 23 and Kentucky No. 24.
Louisville jumped 11 spots to its highest ranking since 2017, after defeating Notre Dame to stay unbeaten.
The Irish slipped 11 spots to No. 21 after a second loss in three weeks to an undefeated team.
POLL POINTS
Georgia's 17-week streak of No. 1 appearances is now tied for the fourth-most of all time with Florida State, which went wire-to-wire as No. 1 in 1999.
The Bulldogs are well-positioned to make a run at the second-longest streak before the season is out.
Next up on the list is an 18-week streak at No. 1 by USC from 1972-73, then comes Miami's 21 in a row from 2001-02.
The record is out of reach this year: USC was No. 1 in 33 straight polls from late in the 2003 season until the final poll of the 2005 season.
The Bulldogs don't seem to be in much danger of either losing or dropping from No. 1 with a victory over the next few weeks.
Georgia goes to Vanderbilt on Saturday, then has a week off before facing Florida on Oct. 28.
A scheduled run of hosting Missouri, at No. 13 Mississippi and at No. 19 Tennessee in November will be a bigger challenge for the Bulldogs.
OUT
Seven teams that entered Saturday unbeaten lost, and two of them dropped out of the AP Top 25.
Fresno State, which lost a key Mountain West game at Wyoming, fell out of the ranking after two weeks in.
Missouri lost to LSU and also slipped out after two weeks ranked.
IN
The two teams jumping into the rankings this week have been here earlier this season.
— UCLA vaulted to No. 18 after beating Washington State.
— No. 23 Kansas returned to the rankings after a week out by routing UCF.
CONFERENCE CALL
Pac-12 — 7 (Nos. 7, 8, 10, 15, 16, 18, 19).
SEC — 6 (Nos. 1, 11, 13, 19, 22, 24).
ACC — 5 (Nos. 4, 12, 14, 17, 25).
Big Ten — 3 (Nos. 2, 3, 6).
Big 12 — 3 (Nos. 5, 9, 23).
Independent — 1 (No. 21).
RANKED vs. RANKED
No. 8 Oregon at No. 7 Washington. The 103rd meeting between the Ducks and Huskies will be the first top-10 matchup.
No. 10 USC at No. 21 Notre Dame. For the first time since 2005-06, the Trojans and Fighting Irish are playing with both teams ranked in consecutive seasons.
No. 25 Miami at No. 12 North Carolina. Only the second meeting in which both teams are ranked.
No. 18 UCLA at No. 15 Oregon State. For the first time since 2001, both teams are ranked, and it's the second straight home game for the Beavers hosting a ranked opponent.
- Sept. 2 – at Indiana | W 23-3
- Sept. 9 – Youngstown State | W 35-7
- Sept. 16 – Western Kentucky | W 63-10
- Sept. 23 – at Notre Dame (7:30 p.m.; NBC & Peacock) | W 17-14
- Sept. 30 – Off
- Oct. 7 – Maryland/Homecoming | W 37-17
- *Oct. 14 – at Purdue
- *Oct. 21 – Penn State
- *Oct. 28 – at Wisconsin
- *Nov. 4 – at Rutgers
- Nov. 11 – Michigan State (7:30 p.m.; NBC)
- *Nov. 18 – Minnesota
- Nov. 25 – at Michigan (noon; FOX)
- Dec. 2 – Big Ten Championship Game (8 p.m.; FOX)