Coaches Poll, College Football Rankings: 1950 to 1959 Final Top 25

Coaches Poll, College Football Rankings 1950s: What are the greatest college football programs of all-time based on the Coaches Poll final rankings?

Where did all the top teams rank in the final 1950 to 1959 top 25 Coaches college football poll? Which programs made the cut and which ones just missed out, but received votes?


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USA TODAY Coaches Poll, All-Time Rankings
Greatest Programs of All-Time | 1950s | 1960s | 1970s | 1980s
1990s | 2000s | 2010s | 2020s | AP Top Programs of All-Time
Coaches Poll Final Top 20  
1950 | 1951 | 1952 | 1953 | 1954 | 1955 | 1956 | 1957 | 1958 | 1959 

Which college football programs are the greatest of all-time according to the UPI and USA TODAY Coaches final polls?

According to the final Coaches Poll rankings, how do the programs rank all-time, by decade, and by era? Which ones were the best over the 1950s?

Take all the Coaches Poll final rankings and use our CFN scoring system – the UPI Coaches Poll national champion gets 25 points, the No. 2 team 24, No. 3 23, and so on down to the bottom.

With three national championships and an all-time great winning streak of 47 games in a row from 1953 to 1957, Oklahoma roared through the 1950s. It was by far the premier college football program of the decade, but a few other schools came up with national championships that still resonate today.

1950s Coaches Poll National Champions
1950 Oklahoma; 1951 Tennessee; 1952 Michigan State; 1953 Maryland;
1954 UCLA; 1955 Oklahoma; 1956 Oklahoma; 1957 Ohio State; 1958 LSU; 1959 Syracuse

Coaches Poll: 1950 to 1959 Final All-Time College Football Rankings

1 Oklahoma 210

2 Michigan State 162

3 Notre Dame 127

4 Ohio State 122

5 Wisconsin 120

6 Georgia Tech 118

7 Ole Miss 112

8 UCLA 105

9 Tennessee 100

10 Maryland 98

11 Army 97

12 Texas 94

13 Iowa 91

14 TCU 83

15 USC 76

16 Illinois 72

17 Auburn 71

T18 Michigan 70

T18 Navy 70

20 Syracuse 59

21 Miami 58

22 Duke 56

23 Alabama 54

24 Princeton 50

25 Texas A&M 49

Others Receiving Votes: LSU 48; California 46;  Rice 46; Kentucky 45; Baylor 43; Pittsburgh 40; Purdue 40; Penn State 38;Arkansas 35; Clemson 35; Stanford 34; Washington 30; Wyoming 30; Minnesota 23; West Virginia 22; Northwestern 19; Washington State 19; Air Force 18; SMU 17; Arizona State 14; Texas Tech 14; Oregon State 13; Georgia 12; San Francisco 12; Florida 11; Holy Cross 9; Oregon 9; Yale 9; Colorado 8; Denver 8; Houston 7; Missouri 7; Oklahoma State 7; Cornell 6; Kansas 6; Miami University 6; NC State 6; Nebraska 6; Rutgers 6

USA TODAY Coaches Poll, All-Time Rankings
Greatest Programs of All-Time | 1950s | 1960s | 1970s | 1980s
1990s | 2000s | 2010s | 2020s | AP Top Programs of All-Time
Coaches Poll Final Top 20  
1950 | 1951 | 1952 | 1953 | 1954 | 1955 | 1956 | 1957 | 1958 | 1959 

NEXT: Coaches Poll, College Football Rankings: 1959 Final Top 20

College Football Transfer Portal 2023 Rankings: 15 Best Linebackers

College Football Transfer Portal 2023: Ranking the 15 best linebackers switching teams

Who are the best and brightest linebackers in the 2023 college football transfer portal? Where will they be playing this season?


Transfer Portal 2023 Rankings: Linebackers

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Oh is this bunch good.

From a few thumpers who can stop the run, to a few hybrids who can do a little of everything, to a bunch of defenders who’ll step right in and become quarterbacks of the defense, there’s going to be a whole lot of noise being made by this year’s group of linebackers in the transfer portal.

Based on a combination of the best players and who’ll make the biggest splashes, here’s our ranking of the top linebackers in the 2023 college football transfer portal and where they all decided to go.

They’re the 15 linebackers in the transfer portal you need to know.

2023 Transfer Portal Rankings
QB | RB | WR | TE | OT | OG/C
DE/EDGE | DT | LB | CB | Saf | Coaches

15 Jestin Jacobs

New School: Oregon
Former School: Iowa

14 Ryan Selig

New School: Minnesota
Former School: Western Michigan

13 DeMario Tolan

New School: Auburn
Former School: LSU

12 JB Brown

New School: Kansas
Former School: Bowling Green

11 Jamil Muhammad

New School: USC
Former School: Georgia State

10 Monty Montgomery

New School: Ole Miss
Former School: Louisville

9 Francisco Mauigoa

New School: Miami
Former School: Washington State

8 Levani Damuni

New School: Utah
Former School: Stanford

7 Antonio Grier

New School: Arkansas
Former School: USF

6 Femi Oladejo

New School: UCLA
Former School: Cal

5 Keenan Pili

New School: Tennessee
Former School: BYU

4 Justin Flowe

New School: Arizona
Former School: Oregon

3 Mason Cobb

New School: USC
Former School: Oklahoma State

2 Ernest Hausmann

New School: Michigan
Former School: Nebraska

1 Omar Speights

New School: LSU
Former School: Oregon State

2023 Transfer Portal Rankings
QB | RB | WR | TE | OT | OG/C
DE/EDGE | DT | LB | CB | Saf | Coaches

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2023 NFL Draft Underclassmen. Early Entrants
QBs | RBs | WRs | TEs | OTs | OG/Cs
Edge | DEs/DTs | LBs | CBs | Safeties
Top 100 2023 NFL Draft Early Entrants
2023 NFL Draft Early Entrants By College

College Football Transfer Portal 2023 Rankings: Head Coaches

New head coaches in new places – who are the seven head coaches who switched jobs, and who’ll make the biggest impact?

Which head coaches are going to new places and who should be the best of the lot? They might not be in a transfer portal, but like the top prospects, a few key coaches moved around.


Transfer Portal 2023 Rankings: Head Coaches

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Okay, okay, there isn’t a transfer portal for college football head coaches, but the ones at new gigs were out there in the mix – just like the players who switched schools – and they found new landing spots that will make them very, very big this season.

No, really. Why are there coaches lumped into a thing about the college football transfer portal? If you go through the lists of where all of the top prospects are going, the new head coaches in new places had a whole lot to do with the moves.

How do the head coaches who changed jobs rank? Who’ll make the biggest impact and who were the best gets of the bunch? There were six college football head coaches who left for other college football gigs, and we’ll throw in a former NFL head man, too.

2023 Transfer Portal Rankings
QB | RB | WR | TE | OT | OG/C
DE/EDGE | DT | LB | CB | Saf | Coaches

7 Scott Satterfield

New School: Cincinnati
Former School: Louisville

This worked for all sides. Louisville – at least parts of the fan base – was ready to move on, the school got the guy it wanted before hiring Satterfield, and the former guy landed in a sweet new gig. The pressure will be on, though. Satterfield didn’t exactly light it up at Louisville, and now he has to keep the success going at Cincinnati as it goes into the Big 12.

6 Jamey Chadwell

New School: Liberty
Former School: Coastal Carolina

This sort of makes sense. Think of it this way. Billy Napier turned Louisiana into a national thing and a Sun Belt powerhouse, and he parlayed that into the Florida job. Chadwell turned Coastal Carolina into a national thing and a Sun Belt powerhouse, and – not to program shame – his next step up is Liberty? It’s a great get for the Flames – Chadwell was in the rumor mill for a slew of bigger-name openings – but this might just be a pit stop.

5 Jeff Brohm

New School: Louisville
Former School: Purdue

Timing. Louisville made a big push for Brohm – a native son and former Cardinal quarterback – the last time around. Brohm stayed put at Purdue, took a program in need of a total reboot – really, look at how bad things got before he arrived – and got it to the Big Ten Championship last year. It was time to make the move. With the shifting away from divisions, he got Purdue about as far as he could.

4 Hugh Freeze

New School: Auburn
Former School: Liberty

Well there you go, SEC. You got one of your own back. It might have been a rough exit out of the conference, but Freeze did huge things at Liberty to show just how good a head coach he really is. Forgetting all the past issues, here’s the problem – it’s not like he won anything at Ole Miss. Even so, the guy knows how to coach a football team and he’s going to crank up the Auburn offense in a hurry thanks to a lot of help from the transfer portal.

3 Matt Rhule

New School: Nebraska
Former School: Baylor (but, really, the Carolina Panthers)

He makes the list, just because. He might not have switched head coaching gigs – he was fired by the Carolina Panthers and was readily available – but he was one of the splashiest of the new coaching gets. He was phenomenal at Temple, great at Baylor, and the NFL is the NFL – that’s about luck as much as anything else. It’s a big name head man in a big-time gig – the spotlight will be on right away.

2 Deion Sanders

New School: Colorado
Former School: Jackson State

Flip a coin on whether or not Coach Prime should be No. 1 on this list, and no argument if you think he should be.

For a program that – at least on the field – might have been the worst among the Power Five conferences last season, Sanders provided and instant jolt of … everything. Star power, national interest, and talent, talent, talent. He made it extremely clear from the start that he was going to bring in guys who could play at a high level, and the transfer portal certainly reflected that.

No, don’t expect Colorado to be this year’s USC, and yes, this is going to take a little while. But if you’re a fan of the Buffaloes, how much fun has this been so far? The only reason he’s not No. 1 is because …

1 Luke Fickell

New School: Wisconsin
Former School: Cincinnati

Since the start of the College Football Playoff era, Wisconsin has been – at least by wins – among the best Power Five programs to not make the mini-tournament.

The program has been great for the last few decades, but it hit a hard ceiling under former head man Paul Chryst. In comes Fickell, and while the proof will be in the results, the tweaks are there to suggest that something big is about to happen.

Basically, picture Wisconsin, but with a competent passing game. If it seems like Fickell brought in a dozen new quarterbacks through the transfer portal, you’re not far off. That, and he was able to keep around most of the great parts already in place.

2023 Transfer Portal Rankings
QB | RB | WR | TE | OT | OG/C
DE/EDGE | DT | LB | CB | Saf | Coaches

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2023 NFL Draft Underclassmen. Early Entrants
QBs | RBs | WRs | TEs | OTs | OG/Cs
Edge | DEs/DTs | LBs | CBs | Safeties
Top 100 2023 NFL Draft Early Entrants
2023 NFL Draft Early Entrants By College

Coaches Poll College Basketball Rankings Final Top 25: 2010 to 2019

Coaches Poll, College Basketball Rankings 2019s: What are the greatest college basketball programs of all-time based on the Coaches Poll final rankings?

Where did all the top college basketball teams rank in the final 2010 to 2019 top 25 Coaches polls? Which programs made the cut and which ones just missed out, but received votes?


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According to the final Coaches Poll rankings, how do the programs rank all-time, by decade, and by era? Which ones were the best over the 2010s?

Take all the Coaches Poll final rankings and use our CFN scoring system – the Coaches national champion gets 25 points, the No. 2 team 24, No. 3 23, and so on down to the bottom.

So this decade is a tad bizarre.

UConn, Duke, and Villanova all won two national titles, and Kansas didn’t win any. However. the Jayhawks were consistent enough to end up as the top program of the decade, even though the Coaches polls – unlike the AP versions – came out after the NCAA Tournament.

Coaches Poll, All-Time College Basketball Rankings
1950s | 1960s | 1970s | 1980s | 1990s | 2000s | 2010s | 2020s
College Football All-Time Rankings Coaches Poll | AP Poll
AP Poll, All-Time College Basketball Rankings
1950s | 1960s | 1970s | 1980s | 1990s | 2000s | 2010s | 2020s
Coaches Top 25 2010 | 2011 | 2012 | 2013 | 2014 | 2015
2016 | 2017 | 2018 | 2019 

NCAA Basketball National Champions
2010 Duke, 2011 UConn, 2012 Kentucky, 2013 Louisville, 2014 UConn, 2015 Duke, 2016 Villanova, 2017 North Carolina, 2018 Villanova, 2019 Virginia

Coaches Poll: 2010 to 2019 Final All-Time College Basketball Rankings

1 Kansas 183

2 Duke 177

3 Kentucky 175

4 Michigan State 148

5 North Carolina 136

6 Villanova 115

7 Gonzaga 102

8 Virginia 101

9 Michigan 97

10 Louisville 96

T11 Arizona 95

T11 Syracuse 95

13 Wisconsin 92

14 Florida 89

15 Ohio State 84

16 Purdue 76

17 West Virginia 71

18 Baylor 63

19 Wichita State 62

20 Xavier 61

21 Oregon 60

22 Butler 58

23 UConn 50

24 Indiana 49

25 Notre Dame 48

Others Receiving Votes (Points): Tennessee 46, Texas Tech 44, Florida State 41, Kansas State 41, Marquette 38, Iowa State 35, Maryland 35, Oklahoma 35, Miami 34, Cincinnati 30, San Diego State 29, UCLA 28, Northern Iowa 25, Auburn 24, VCU 23, New Mexico 20, Pitt 20, South Carolina 20, Loyola-Chicago 19, Georgetown 18, Houston 18, Texas A&M 18, BYU 17, Utah 17, Creighton 16, Missouri 15, Virginia Tech 12, Clemson 11, LSU 11, Saint Louis 11, Murray State 10, Texas 10, Buffalo 9, Cornell 9, Nevada 9, Dayton 8, Memphis 8, NC State 8, Washington 8, Wofford 8, Saint Mary’s 7, Vanderbilt 7, Arkansas 6, Richmond 5, SMU 3, La Salle 2, Stanford 2, Florida Gulf Coast 1, Iowa 1, Ohio 1, Utah State 1

Coaches Poll, All-Time College Basketball Rankings
Final All-Time College Basketball Rankings1950s | 1960s
1970s | 1980s | 1990s | 2000s | 2010s | 2020s
Coaches Top 25 2010 | 2011 | 2012 | 2013 | 2014 | 2015
2016 | 2017 | 2018 | 2019
College Football Coaches Greatest Programs of All-Time 

NEXT: Coaches Poll College Basketball Rankings: 2019 Final Top 25

College Football Transfer Portal 2023 Rankings: 15 Best Tight Ends

College Football Transfer Portal 2023: Ranking the 15 best tight ends switching teams

Who are the best and brightest tight ends in the 2023 college football transfer portal? Where will they be playing this season?


Transfer Portal 2023 Rankings: Tight Ends

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The tight end transfers are strong this season. They’re instant impact playmakers – the ones on this list should all play huge roles. Don’t be shocked if this turns out to be among the better positions in this transfer cycle.

Based on a combination of the best players and who’ll make the biggest splashes, here’s our ranking of the top tight end in the 2023 college football transfer portal and where they all decided to go.

They’re the 15 tight ends in the transfer portal you need to know.

2023 Transfer Portal Rankings
QB | RB | WR | TE | OT | OG/C
DE/EDGE | DT | LB | CB | Saf | Coaches

15 Kole Taylor

New School: West Virginia
Former School: LSU

14 Tanner Arkin

New School: Illinois
Former School: Colorado State

13 Moliki Matavao

New School: UCLA
Former School: Oregon

12 Tyneil Hopper

New School: Michigan State
Former School: Boise State

11 Jack Bech

New School: LSU
Former School: TCU

10 Josh Cuevas

New School: Washington
Former School: Cal Poly

9 Austin Stogner

New School: Oklahoma
Former School: South Carolina

8 Erick Ali

New School: Iowa
Former School: Michigan

7 Rivaldo Fairweather

New School: Auburn
Former School: FIU

6 Arik Gilbert

New School: Nebraska
Former School: Georgia

5 Kyle Morlock

New School: Florida State
Former School: Shorter

4 Trey Knox

New School: South Carolina
Former School: Arkansas

3 Seydou Traore

New School: Colorado
Former School: Arkansas State

2 CJ Dippre

New School: Alabama
Former School: Maryland

1 Jaheim Bell

New School: Florida State
Former School: South Carolina

2023 Transfer Portal Rankings
QB | RB | WR | TE | OT | OG/C
DE/EDGE | DT | LB | CB | Saf | Coaches

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2023 NFL Draft Underclassmen. Early Entrants
QBs | RBs | WRs | TEs | OTs | OG/Cs
Edge | DEs/DTs | LBs | CBs | Safeties
Top 100 2023 NFL Draft Early Entrants
2023 NFL Draft Early Entrants By College

College Football Transfer Portal 2023 Rankings: 15 Best Cornerbacks

College Football Transfer Portal 2023: Ranking the 15 best cornerbacks switching teams

Who are the best and brightest cornerbacks in the 2023 college football transfer portal? Where will they be playing this season?


Transfer Portal 2023 Rankings: Cornerbacks

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Outside of quarterback, the corners might be the most starting-ready position in this year’s transfer portal.

Who doesn’t want to play corner for Deion Sanders? Colorado got a few fantastic cornerbacks, North Carolina lost a few big talents, and a few talents rom the FCS are about to become extremely important on a bigger stage.

Based on a combination of the best players and who’ll make the biggest splashes, here’s our ranking of the top cornerbacks in the 2023 college football transfer portal and where they all decided to go.

They’re the 15 cornerbacks in the transfer portal you need to know.

2023 Transfer Portal Rankings
QB | RB | WR | TE | OT | OG/C
DE/EDGE | DT | LB | CB | Saf | Coaches

15 Jestin Jacobs

New School: Oregon
Former School: Iowa

15 Tayvion Beasley

New School: Colorado
Former School: Jackson State

14 Gavin Holmes

New School: Texas
Former School: Wake Forest

13 Ja’Quan Sheppard

New School: Maryland
Former School: Cincinnati

12 JQ Hardaway

New School: Kentucky
Former School: Cincinnati

11 Duce Chestnut

New School: LSU
Former School: Syracuse

10 Davonte Brown

New School: Miami
Former School: UCF

9 Alijah Huzzie

New School: North Carolina
Former School: ETSU

8 Storm Duck

New School: Penn State
Former School: North Carolina

7 Davison Igbinosun

New School: UNDECIDED
Former School: Ole Miss

6 Denver Harris

New School: LSU
Former School: Texas A&M

5 Christian Roland-Wallace

New School: USC
Former School: Arizona

4 Tony Grimes

New School: Texas A&M
Former School: North Carolina

3 Fentrell Cypress

New School: Florida State
Former School: Virginia

2 Zy Alexander

New School: LSU
Former School: SE Louisiana

1 Travis Hunter

New School: Colorado
Former School: Jackson State

2023 Transfer Portal Rankings
QB | RB | WR | TE | OT | OG/C
DE/EDGE | DT | LB | CB | Saf | Coaches

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2023 NFL Draft Underclassmen. Early Entrants
QBs | RBs | WRs | TEs | OTs | OG/Cs
Edge | DEs/DTs | LBs | CBs | Safeties
Top 100 2023 NFL Draft Early Entrants
2023 NFL Draft Early Entrants By College

College Football Transfer Portal 2023 Rankings: 15 Best Offensive Tackles

College Football Transfer Portal 2023: Ranking the 15 best offensive tackles switching teams

Who are the best and brightest offensive tackles in the 2023 college football transfer portal? Where will they be playing this season?


Transfer Portal 2023 Rankings: Offensive Tackles

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This year’s batch of offensive tackles in the transfer portal might not be quite at the level of the rest of the positions, but they’re a big deal. A whole slew of big holes are getting instantly fixed for a few key teams. In some cases, the best on this list might be a final piece of a good puzzle.

Based on a combination of the best players and who’ll make the biggest splashes, here’s our ranking of the top offensive tackles in the 2023 college football transfer portal and where they all decided to go.

They’re the 15 offensive tackles in the transfer portal you need to know.

2023 Transfer Portal Rankings
QB | RB | WR | TE | OT | OG/C
DE/EDGE | DT | LB | CB | Saf | Coaches

15 Damieon George

New School: Florida
Former School: Alabama

14 Marques Cox

New School: Kentucky
Former School: Northern Illinois

13 Dillon Wade

New School: Auburn
Former School: Tulsa

12 Aaron Frost

New School: Arizona State
Former School: Nevada

11 Dalton Cooper

New School: Oklahoma State
Former School: Texas State

10 Andrej Karic

New School: Tennessee
Former School: Texas

9 Savion Washington

New School: Colorado
Former School: Kent State

8 Logan Brown

New School: Kansas
Former School: Wisconsin

7 Tommy Brockermeyer

New School: TCU
Former School: Alabama

6 Gunner Britton

New School: Auburn
Former School: WKU

5 Walter Rouse

New School: Oklahoma
Former School: Stanford

4 Kiyaunta Goodwin

New School: Florida
Former School: Kentucky

3 Myles Hinton

New School: Michigan
Former School: Stanford

2 Jeremiah Byers

New School: Florida State
Former School: UTEP

1 Ajani Cornelius

New School: Oregon
Former School: Rhode Island

2023 Transfer Portal Rankings
QB | RB | WR | TE | OT | OG/C
DE/EDGE | DT | LB | CB | Saf | Coaches

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2023 NFL Draft Underclassmen. Early Entrants
QBs | RBs | WRs | TEs | OTs | OG/Cs
Edge | DEs/DTs | LBs | CBs | Safeties
Top 100 2023 NFL Draft Early Entrants
2023 NFL Draft Early Entrants By College

College Football Transfer Portal 2023 Rankings: 15 Best Offensive Guards, Centers

College Football Transfer Portal 2023: Ranking the 15 best offensive guards and centers switching teams

Who are the best and brightest offensive guards and centers in the 2023 college football transfer portal? Where will they be playing this season?


Transfer Portal 2023 Rankings: Offensive Guards and Centers

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The interior of the offensive line might not generate a ton of buzz, but ask Michigan how much of an impact a key transfer can make – Olusegun Oluwatimi from Virginia was a dominant force at center. Watch out for a few instant fixes from this year’s batch.

Based on a combination of the best players and who’ll make the biggest splashes, here’s our ranking of the top offensive guards and centers in the 2023 college football transfer portal and where they all decided to go.

They’re the 15 offensive guards and centers in the transfer portal you need to know.

2023 Transfer Portal Rankings
QB | RB | WR | TE | OT | OG/C
DE/EDGE | DT | LB | CB | Saf | Coaches

15 Keiondre Jones

New School: Florida State
Former School: Auburn

14 Spencer Holstege

New School: UCLA
Former School: Purdue

13 Paul Maile (C)

New School: BYU
Former School: Utah

12 Casey Roddick

New School: Florida State
Former School: Colorado

11 Jarrett Kingston

New School: USC
Former School: Washington State

10 Drake Nugent

New School: Michigan
Former School: Stanford

9 Willie Lampkin

New School: North Carolina
Former School: Coastal Carolina

8 Clark Barrington

New School: Baylor
Former School: BYU

7 Kyle Hergel

New School: Boston College
Former School: Texas State

6 Jake Renfro (C)

New School: Wisconsin
Former School: Cincinnati

5 Avery Jones

New School: Auburn
Former School: East Carolina

4 Junior Angilau

New School: Oregon
Former School: Texas

3 Matthew Lee (C)

New School: Miami
Former School: UCF

2 Javion Cohen

New School: Miami
Former School: Alabama

1 LaDairus Henderson

New School: Michigan
Former School: Arizona State

2023 Transfer Portal Rankings
QB | RB | WR | TE | OT | OG/C
DE/EDGE | DT | LB | CB | Saf | Coaches

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2023 NFL Draft Underclassmen. Early Entrants
QBs | RBs | WRs | TEs | OTs | OG/Cs
Edge | DEs/DTs | LBs | CBs | Safeties
Top 100 2023 NFL Draft Early Entrants
2023 NFL Draft Early Entrants By College

Coaches Poll College Basketball Rankings Final Top 25: 2000 to 2009

Coaches Poll, College Basketball Rankings 2000s: What are the greatest college basketball programs of all-time based on the Coaches Poll final rankings?

Where did all the top college basketball teams rank in the final 2000 to 2009 top 25 Coaches polls? Which programs made the cut and which ones just missed out, but received votes?


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According to the final Coaches rankings, how do the programs rank all-time, by decade, and by era? Which ones were the best over the 2000s?

Take all the Coaches final rankings and use our CFN scoring system – the Coaches final regular season No. 1 gets 25 points, the No. 2 team 24, No. 3 23, and so on down to the bottom.

Duke ended up on top of the Coaches rankings for the decade even though it won one national title. It was a decade of outliers with Syracuse, Michigan State, and Maryland all taking away an NCAA title, but it was Florida that was the star for a two year back-to-back stretch in a short run of brilliance that’s been a tad underappreciated ever since.

As noted throughout all of these rankings, the Coaches final top 25 came out at the end of the regular season and before the NCAA Tournaments.

Coaches Poll, All-Time College Basketball Rankings
Final All-Time College Basketball Rankings 
1950s | 1960s | 1970s | 1980s | 1990s | 2000s | 2010s | 2020s
College Football All-Time Rankings Coaches Poll | AP Poll
AP Poll, All-Time College Basketball Rankings
Final All-Time College Basketball Rankings 
1950s | 1960s | 1970s | 1980s | 1990s | 2000s | 2010s | 2020s
Coaches Top 25 2000 | 2001 | 2002 | 2003 | 2004 | 2005
2006 | 2007 | 2008 | 2009

NCAA Basketball National Champions
2000 Michigan State, 2001 Duke, 2002 Maryland, 2003 Syracuse, 2004 UConn, 2005 North Carolina, 2006 Florida, 2007 Florida, 2008 Kansas, 2009 North Carolina

Coaches Poll: 2000 to 2009 Final All-Time College Basketball Rankings

1 Duke 172

2 Kansas 161

3 North Carolina 141

T4 Michigan State 115

T4 UConn 115

6 Pitt 106

T7 Florida 102

T78 Texas 102

9 Arizona 101

10 UCLA 100

11 Illinois 97

12 Kentucky 96

13 Stanford 83

T14 Memphis 80

T14 Oklahoma 80

16 Wisconsin 79

17 Louisville 77

18 Syracuse 73

T19 Gonzaga 69

T19 Maryland 69

21 Oklahoma State 62

22 Villanova 59

T23 Georgetown 55

T23 Ohio State 55

25 Xavier 52

Others Receiving Votes (Points): Cincinnati 50, Marquette 46, Wake Forest 46, LSU 45, Tennessee 45, Washington 41, Boston College 37, Oregon 37, Iowa State 34, West Virginia 34, Missouri 33, Butler 31, Purdue 29, Temple 26, Georgia Tech 23, Indiana 23, St. Joseph’s 23, USC 23, Alabama 21, Notre Dame 21, Texas A&M 21, Washington State 20, Southern Illinois 19, George Mason 18, Mississippi State 18, Davidson 17, Ole Miss 17, Tulsa 17, Kent State 14, UNLV 12, Utah 12, NC State 11, Nevada 10, Texas Tech 10, Vanderbilt 9, St. John’s 8, Arizona State 7, George Washington 7, Virginia 7, Miami 6, Wichita State 5, Florida State 4, Winthrop 4, WKU 4, Creighton 3, Drake 3, Iowa 3, UAB 3, UW Milwaukee 3, Bradley 2, Bucknell 1, Dayton 1, Penn State 1, Virginia Tech 1

Coaches Poll, All-Time College Basketball Rankings
Final All-Time College Basketball Rankings1950s | 1960s
1970s | 1980s | 1990s | 2000s | 2010s | 2020s
Coaches Top 25 2000 | 2001 | 2002 | 2003 | 2004 | 2005
2006 | 2007 | 2008 | 2009

NEXT: Coaches Poll College Basketball Rankings: 2009 Final Top 25

Coaches Poll, College Football Rankings: 1980 to 1989 Final Top 25

Coaches Poll, College Football Rankings 1980s: What are the greatest college football programs of all-time based on the Coaches Poll final rankings?

Where did all the top teams rank in the final 1980 to 1989 top 25 Coaches college football poll? Which programs made the cut and which ones just missed out but received votes?


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USA TODAY Coaches Poll, All-Time Rankings
Greatest Programs of All-Time | 1950s | 1960s | 1970s | 1980s
1990s | 2000s | 2010s | 2020s | AP Top Programs of All-Time
Coaches Poll Top 20
1980 | 1981 | 1982 | 1983 | 1984 | 1985 | 1986 | 1987 | 1988 | 1989 

Which college football programs are the greatest of all-time according to the UPI and USA TODAY Coaches final polls?

According to the final Coaches Poll rankings, how do the programs rank all-time, by decade, and by era? Which ones were the best over the 1980s?

Take all the Coaches Poll final rankings and use our CFN scoring system – the UPI Coaches Poll national champion gets 25 points, the No. 2 team 24, No. 3 23, and so on down to the bottom.

The bridesmaid and never the bride, Nebraska was fantastic throughout the 1980s but couldn’t break through and win the national title. Miami might have been the biggest star of the decade with three national championships, but the Huskers were a bit more consistent in the Coaches Poll rankings.

1980s Coaches Poll National Champions
1980 Georgia; 1981 Clemson; 1982 Penn State; 1983 Miami; 1984 BYU; 1985 Oklahoma; 1986 Penn State; 1987 Miami; 1988 Notre Dame; 1999 Miami

Coaches Poll: 1980 to 1989 Final All-Time College Football Rankings

1 Nebraska 194

2 Miami 149

3 Oklahoma 148

T4 Michigan 135

T4 Penn State 135

6 Florida State 134

7 UCLA 129

8 Auburn 123

9 Alabama 120

10 Georgia 113

11 Ohio State 106

12 BYU 91

13 USC 87

14 Washington 86

15 Clemson 81

16 Pittsburgh 79

17 Arkansas 78

18 Iowa 72

19 LSU 67

20 Notre Dame 64

21 SMU 63

22 Oklahoma State 58

22 Texas 58

24 Tennessee 56

25 West Virginia 54

Others Receiving Votes: Texas A&M 50; North Carolina 48; Florida 46; Arizona State 41; Baylor 39; Boston College 36; Syracuse 36; Air Force 32; Illinois 32; Maryland 28; Michigan State 28; South Carolina 24; Colorado 22; Michigan 22; Virginia 20; Arizona 16; Indiana 13; Fresno State 10; Purdue 10; Texas Tech 10; Washington State 10; Mississippi State 9; NC State 9; Georgia Tech 8; Kentucky 7; Southern Miss 7; Missouri 6; Wyoming 6

USA TODAY Coaches Poll, All-Time Rankings
Greatest Programs of All-Time | 1950s | 1960s | 1970s | 1980s
1990s | 2000s | 2010s | 2020s | AP Top Programs of All-Time
Coaches Poll Top 20
1980 | 1981 | 1982 | 1983 | 1984 | 1985 | 1986 | 1987 | 1988 | 1989

NEXT: Coaches Poll, College Football Rankings: 1989 Final Top 20