AP Poll College Basketball Rankings Final Top 25: 1990 to 1999

AP Poll, college basketball rankings 1990s: What are the greatest programs of all-time based on the AP poll final rankings?

Where did all the top college basketball teams rank in the final 1990 to 1999 top 25 AP polls? Which programs made the cut and which ones just missed out, but received votes?


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According to the final AP rankings, how do the programs rank all-time, by decade, and by era? Which ones were the best over the 1990s?

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

Kentucky was the best college basketball program of the 1990s and Kansas was brilliant throughout the decade despite not winning a national title.

Duke … UNLV. Those were the two programs who set the tone for 1990s basketball with what they did early on. UNLV defined cool – Michigan and the Fab Five took over, but the 1990 Runnin’ Rebels were the original – and Duke played the villain perfectly. But again, Kentucky and Kansas were consistently fantastic – UNLV fell off the map – and the AP rankings reflected that.

Keep in mind, the AP did its final rankings at the end of the regular season and not after the NCAA Tournament.

AP Poll, All-Time College Basketball Rankings
Final All-Time College Basketball Rankings1950s | 1960s
1970s | 1980s | 1990s | 2000s | 2010s | 2020s
College Football AP Greatest Programs of All-Time
AP Top 25 1990 | 1991 | 1992 | 1993 | 1994 | 1995
1996 | 1997 | 1998 | 1999

NCAA Basketball National Champions
1990 UNLV, 1991 Duke, 1992 Duke, 1993 North Carolina, 1994 Arkansas, 1995 UCLA, 1996 Kentucky, 1997 Arizona, 1998 Kentucky, 1999 UConn

AP Poll: 1990 to 1999 Final All-Time College Basketball Rankings

1 Kentucky 188

2 Kansas 185

3 North Carolina 160

4 Duke 158

5 Arizona 157

6 Arkansas 136

7 UConn 128

8 UCLA 115

9 Utah 107

10 Cincinnati 101

11 Purdue 94

T12 Indiana 84

T12 Michigan State 84

14 UMass 83

15 Michigan 76

16 Syracuse 72

17 UNLV 69

18 Wake Forest 67

19 Ohio State 56

T20 Missouri 49

T20 Oklahoma State 49

22 Georgetown 48

23 Maryland 47

T24 Louisville 40

T24 Seton Hall 40

T24 Stanford 40

Others Receiving Votes (Points): Villanova 39, Georgia Tech 38, Oklahoma 37, Minnesota 32, New Mexico 32, South Carolina 32, Alabama 29, Princeton 26, Iowa 23, St. John’s 23, Auburn 22, Clemson 21, Florida State 21, College of Charleston 20, Mississippi State 20, Illinois 19, Iowa State 19, Nebraska 19, Texas Tech 18, USC 18, Vanderbilt 18, Xavier 17, Miami 16, Temple 16, Florida 15, New Mexico State 15, La Salle 14, St. Joseph’s 14, Ole Miss 13, Virginia 13, LSU 12, Marquette 11, TCU 11, Western Kentucky 11, Arizona State 10, Cal 10, Memphis 10, East Tennessee State 9, Georgia 9, New Orleans 9, Texas 9, Penn State 8, Wisconsin 8, Tennessee 6, Loyola Marymount 5, DePaul 4, Oregon State 4, Virginia Tech 4, Boston College 3, Charlotte 2, Colorado 2, Saint Louis 2, Murray State 1, Southern Miss 1

AP Poll, All-Time College Basketball Rankings
Final All-Time College Basketball Rankings1950s | 1960s
1970s | 1980s | 1990s | 2000s | 2010s | 2020s
College Football AP Greatest Programs of All-Time
AP Top 25 1990 | 1991 | 1992 | 1993 | 1994 | 1995
1996 | 1997 | 1998 | 1999 

NEXT: AP Poll College Basketball Rankings: 1999 Final Top 25

AP Poll College Basketball Rankings Final Top 25: 1980 to 1989

AP Poll, college basketball rankings 1980s: What are the greatest programs of all-time based on the AP poll final rankings?

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


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

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

Because the final AP college basketball rankings come out at the end of the regular season instead of after the NCAA Tournament, there are a few egregious blips here and there – like UCLA not being the program of the 1960s. All of those inconsistencies are holding the 1980’s beer.

Remember those back-to-back DePaul national champs in 1980 and 1981? They finished on top of the final AP polls, but crashed in tournament time.

1885 national champion Villanova wasn’t in the final AP rankings, and neither was the Danny (Manning) and the Miracles Kansas team of 1988 that won it all.

It was the decade when the NCAA Tournament went to a whole other level, and these rankings reflect that.

AP Poll, All-Time College Basketball Rankings
Final All-Time College Basketball Rankings1950s | 1960s
1970s | 1980s | 1990s | 2000s | 2010s | 2020s
AP Top 20 1980 | 1981 | 1982 | 1983 | 1984 | 1985
1986 | 1987 | 1988 | 1989
College Football AP Greatest Programs of All-Time

NCAA Basketball National Champions
1980 Louisville, 1981 Indiana, 1982 North Carolina, 1983 NC State, 1984 Georgetown, 1985 Villanova, 1986 Louisville, 1987 Indiana, 1988 Kansas, 1989 Michigan

AP Poll: 1980 to 1989 Final All-Time College Basketball Rankings

1 North Carolina 200

2 Georgetown 149

3 Kentucky 131

4 DePaul 117

5 UNLV 115

6 Duke 112

T7 Indiana 108

T7 Syracuse 108

9 Louisville 101

T10 Illinois 96

T10 Oklahoma 96

12 St. John’s 81

13 Missouri 79

14 Michigan 77

15 Oregon State 76

16 Iowa 71

16 Memphis State 71

18 Virginia 66

19 Purdue 64

20 Notre Dame 69

21 Arkansas 55

22 UCLA 53

23 LSU 51

T24 Arizona 49

T24 Temple 49

Others Receiving Votes (Points): Houston 46, Kansas 43, Maryland 41, Georgia Tech 40, NC State 39, Tulsa 38, Alabama 36, Pitt 32, Arizona State 31, BYU 31, Wake Forest 30, Bradley 27, UTEP 23, Wyoming 22, West Virginia 21, Minnesota 19, Idaho 18, Louisiana Tech 18, Ohio State 16, Boston College 15, Fresno State 15, Georgia 15, Seton Hall 15, VCU 15, Clemson 13, Stanford 13, Villanova 13, Loyola-Chicago 12, Utah 12, Wichita State 12, Chattanooga 11, Loyola Marymount 11, Tennessee 11, Washington 11, Florida State 10, New Orleans 10, Navy 9, Texas Tech 9, UAB 9, Weber State 9, Ball State 8, Michigan State 8, Xavier 8, Oklahoma State 7, TCU 7, Kansas State 6

AP Poll, All-Time College Basketball Rankings
Final All-Time College Basketball Rankings1950s | 1960s
1970s | 1980s | 1990s | 2000s | 2010s | 2020s
AP Top 20 1980 | 1981 | 1982 | 1983 | 1984 | 1985
1986 | 1987 | 1988 | 1989
College Football AP Greatest Programs of All-Time

NEXT: AP Poll College Basketball Rankings: 1989 Final Top 20

AP Poll College Basketball Rankings Final Top 25: 1970 to 1979

AP Poll, college basketball rankings 1970s: What are the greatest programs of all-time based on the AP poll final rankings?

Where did all the top college basketball teams rank in the final 1970 to 1979 top 25 AP polls? Which programs made the cut and which ones just missed out, but received votes?


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According to the final AP rankings, how do the programs rank all-time, by decade, and by era? Which ones were the best over the 1970s?

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

As acknowledged from the beginning, there are massive inconsistencies and glitches over the years because the final rankings come out at the end of the regular season and before the NCAA Tournament – except for 1974 and 1975.

Overall, though, this is one of the more representative decades of the bunch. UCLA was the dominant program in the 1960s, but Kentucky got the credit overall in the rankings. The Bruins were easily the stars of the 1970s, with some interesting out-of-the-norm programs rocking the overall top 25.

AP Poll, All-Time College Basketball Rankings
Final All-Time College Basketball Rankings1950s | 1960s
1970s | 1980s | 1990s | 2000s | 2010s | 2020s
AP Top 20 1970 | 1971 | 1972 | 1973 | 1974 | 1975
1976 | 1977 | 1978 | 1979
College Football AP Greatest Programs of All-Time  

NCAA Basketball National Champions
1970 UCLA, 1971 UCLA, 1972 UCLA, 1973 UCLA, 1974 NC State, 1975 UCLA, 1976 Indiana, 1977 Marquette, 1978 Kentucky, 1979 Michigan State

AP Poll: 1970 to 1979 Final All-Time College Basketball Rankings

1 UCLA 241

2 Marquette 197

3 North Carolina 149

4 Notre Dame 141

5 Kentucky 132

6 Indiana 107

7 Maryland 88

8 Penn 85

9 NC State 84

10 Louisville 81

11 Long Beach State 77

12 Syracuse 70

13 Michigan 69

14 South Carolina 67

15 Alabama 63

16 Kansas 57

17 UNLV 54

18 San Francisco 53

19 DePaul 52

20 Arkansas 50

21 Providence 46

22 Michigan State 45

22 Minnesota 45

24 Western Kentucky 43

25 Florida State 42

Others Receiving Votes (Points): Houston 39, Kansas State 38, Jacksonville 37, Louisiana Tech (SW Louisiana) 37, USC 36, Utah 35, Duke 34, Tennessee 33, Drake 30, Rutgers 30, Arizona State 28, Cincinnati 27, Memphis State 27, Purdue 26, Indiana State 25, Iowa 25, BYU 23, Missouri 23, Ohio State 23, St. Bonaventure 23, Detroit 22, New Mexico State 21, LSU 19, Oral Roberts 18, Villanova 18, Fordham 17, Wake Forest 17, Marshall 14, New Mexico 14, Princeton 14, Virginia 14, Vanderbilt 13, Arizona 11, Davidson 11, Duquesne 11, Oklahoma 10, Pitt 10, Texas Tech 10, Utah State 10, Charlotte 9, Niagara 9, St. John’s 9, Texas 9, Oregon State 8, Austin Peay 7, Centenary 7, Miami University 7, Toledo 7, Dayton 6, Pepperdine 6, VMI 6

AP Poll, All-Time College Basketball Rankings
Final All-Time College Basketball Rankings1950s | 1960s
1970s | 1980s | 1990s | 2000s | 2010s | 2020s
AP Top 20 1970 | 1971 | 1972 | 1973 | 1974 | 1975
1976 | 1977 | 1978 | 1979
College Football AP Greatest Programs of All-Time  

NEXT: AP Poll College Basketball Rankings: 1979 Final Top 20

AP Poll College Basketball Rankings Final Top 25: 1960 to 1969

AP Poll, college basketball rankings 1960s: What are the greatest programs of all-time based on the AP poll final rankings?

Where did all the top college basketball teams rank in the final 1960 to 1969 top 25 AP polls? Which programs made the cut and which ones just missed out, but received votes?


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According to the final AP rankings, how do the programs rank all-time, by decade, and by era? Which ones were the best over the 1960s?

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

By a bazillion miles, this is easily the glitchiest decade of the bunch.

Obviously UCLA was the dominant program of the era as it ripped through the NCAA Tournament with five national titles in six years – and it’s No. 2 in this.

Why? The AP only ranked ten teams from 1961 to 1968, and Duke was a part of most of them, and UCLA wasn’t. Also, the final polls came out after the regular seasons, not the NCAA Tournament. By the way, the Blue Devils didn’t win any national titles in the 1960s.

AP Poll, All-Time College Basketball Rankings
Final All-Time College Basketball Rankings1950s | 1960s
1970s | 1980s | 1990s | 2000s | 2010s | 2020s
AP Top 20 1960 | 1961 | 1962 | 1963 | 1964 | 1965
1966 | 1967 | 1968 | 1969
College Football AP Greatest Programs of All-Time 

NCAA Basketball National Champions
1960 Ohio State, 1961 Cincinnati, 1962 Cincinnati, 1963 Loyola-Chicago, 1964 UCLA, 1965 UCLA, 1966 Texas Western (UTEP), 1967 UCLA, 1968 UCLA, 1969 UCLA

AP Poll: 1960 to 1969 Final All-Time College Basketball Rankings

1 Duke 143

2 UCLA 123

3 Cincinnati 117

4 Kentucky 110

5 Ohio State 92

6 North Carolina 87

7 Davidson 75

8 Michigan 66

T9 Bradley 63

T9 St. Bonaventure 63

11 Villanova 62

12 Loyola-Chicago 61

T13 Kansas 52

T13 Louisville 52

T15 Houston 44

T15 St. Joseph’s 44

T17 Kansas State 42

T17 Mississippi State 42

T17 Wichita State 42

20 Colorado 41

T21 Utah 39

T21 UTEP 39

T21 Vanderbilt 39

24 West Virginia 38

25 Western Kentucky 36

Others Receiving Votes (Points): Providence 34, NYU 31, Boston College 27, St. John’s 25, Cal 24, Illinois 24, La Salle 24, Santa Clara 23, Arizona State 22, Princeton 21, New Mexico 20, Oregon State 20, Purdue 20, Columbia 19, Indiana 19, Minnesota 19, USC 19, Bowling Green 18, Iowa 18, Tennessee 18, Utah State 18, BYU 17, DePaul 17, Duquesne 17, Miami 16, Auburn 15, Drake 15, New Mexico State 14, Georgia Tech 13, South Carolina 13, Marquette 12, Saint Louis 11, Holy Cross 10, Notre Dame 9, Wake Forest 7

AP Poll, All-Time College Basketball Rankings
Final All-Time College Basketball Rankings1950s | 1960s
1970s | 1980s | 1990s | 2000s | 2010s | 2020s
AP Top 20 1960 | 1961 | 1962 | 1963 | 1964 | 1965
1966 | 1967 | 1968 | 1969
College Football AP Greatest Programs of All-Time

NEXT: AP Poll College Basketball Rankings: 1969 Final Top 20

AP Poll College Basketball Rankings Final Top 25: 1949 to 1959

AP Poll, college basketball rankings 1950s: What are the greatest programs of all-time based on the AP poll final rankings?

Where did all the top college basketball teams rank in the final 1949 to 1959 top 25 AP polls? Which programs made the cut and which ones just missed out, but received votes?


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According to the final AP rankings, how do the programs rank all-time, by decade, and by era? Which ones were the best over the 1950s? The AP college basketball poll started at the end of the 1948-1949 season, so we’re lumping it in this decade, too.

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

Kentucky won four NCAA Tournaments, proving to be even better than the final rankings in the AP polls. Even so, it was the best program of the 1950s by a relative mile.

One key note: The AP final rankings came out at the end of the regular seasons, not after the NCAA Tournaments.

AP Poll, All-Time College Basketball Rankings
Final All-Time College Basketball Rankings1950s | 1960s
1970s | 1980s | 1990s | 2000s | 2010s | 2020s
AP Top 20 19491950 | 1951 | 1952 | 1953 | 1954 | 1955
1956 | 1957 | 1958 | 1959
College Football AP Greatest Programs of All-Time

NCAA Basketball National Champions
1949 
Kentucky, 1950 CCNY, 1951 Kentucky, 1952 Kentucky, 1953 Indiana, 1954 La Salle, 1955 San Francisco, 1956 San Francisco, 1957 North Carolina, 1958 Kentucky, 1959 Cal

AP Poll: 1949 to 1959 Final All-Time College Basketball Rankings

1 Kentucky 228

2 NC State 132

3 Bradley 124

4 Kansas State 119

5 Illinois 113

6 San Francisco 104

7 Oklahoma State (A&M) 102

8 Duquesne 100

8 Kansas 100

10 Saint Louis 96

11 West Virginia 90

12 Indiana 86

13 Dayton 83

13 Holy Cross 83

13 La Salle 83

16 UCLA 80

17 Iowa 75

18 Seattle 71

19 St. John’s 69

20 North Carolina 68

21 Western Kentucky 66

22 Notre Dame 63

23 Cincinnati 54

24 Washington 53

25 Duke 50

Others Receiving Votes (Points): Louisville 49, Utah 49, Mississippi State 45, Michigan State 43, Oklahoma City 41, SMU 41, Vanderbilt 41, Seton Hall 36, Alabama 35, Minnesota 35, LSU 33, Villanova 33, Temple 32, Ohio State 30, Wake Forest 29, Auburn 28, Cal 28, George Washington 26, Maryland 26, Arizona 25, Marquette 24, Columbia 23, USC 22, Wyoming 19, St. Bonaventure 18, Penn State 17, Tulane 17, Bowling Green 16, Oregon State 16, BYU 15, Yale 15, Memphis State 14, Long Island 13, St. Joseph’s 12, Toledo 12, Colorado 11, Saint Mary’s 11, Idaho State 10, Loyola-Chicago 10, Murray State 10, Niagara 10, Santa Clara 10, TCU 10, Tulsa 10, Wisconsin 10, San Jose State 9, Butler 8, Siena 8, Washington State 8, DePaul 7, Hamline 7, Canisius 6, SW Missouri State 6, Texas State 6

AP Poll, All-Time College Basketball Rankings
Final All-Time College Basketball Rankings1950s | 1960s
1970s | 1980s | 1990s | 2000s | 2010s | 2020s
AP Top 20 19491950 | 1951 | 1952 | 1953 | 1954 | 1955
1956 | 1957 | 1958 | 1959
College Football AP Greatest Programs of All-Time 

NEXT: AP Poll College Basketball Rankings: 1959 Final Top 20

Coaches Poll College Basketball Rankings: Greatest Programs Of All-Time

Coaches Poll college basketball all-time rankings. Where do all the best programs and teams rank since the start of the poll?

According to the Coaches college basketball polls, where do all of the teams historically rank? Here are the top basketball programs of all-time utilizing the Coaches Poll final rankings.


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Coaches Poll College Basketball Rankings: Greatest Programs Of All-Time

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

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The AP rankings get more love, respect, and eyeballs than the Coaches Poll for both college football and college basketball, but …

At least lately, the Coaches Poll is a tad more representative for hoops.

The final AP college basketball rankings come before the NCAA Tournament. Ever since the 1991-1992 season, the Coaches Poll has released its final rankings after the NCAA Tournament – so it gets the national champion right.

Just like we do for the football rankings, take all the Coaches Poll final rankings and use our simple scoring system – the final Coaches Poll No. 1 in each season gets 25 points, the No. 2 team 24, No. 3 23, and so on down to the bottom.

Based on the final Coaches Poll college basketball rankings from the 1950-1951 season through to the end of the 2021-2022 regular season, who earned the most all-time recognition from the Coaches Poll voters?

Coaches Poll, All-Time College Basketball Rankings
1950s | 1960s | 1970s | 1980s | 1990s | 2000s | 2010s | 2020s  

Coaches Poll: 1949 to 2022 Final All-Time College Basketball Rankings

1 Kentucky 1030

2 North Carolina 997

3 Duke 855

4 Kansas 834

5 UCLA 754

6 Louisville 546

7 Indiana 495

8 Michigan State 465

9 Arizona 461

10 Syracuse 433

11 Michigan 395

12 Cincinnati 370

13 Villanova 362

14 Ohio State 357

15 Illinois 352

16 Marquette 346

17 Maryland 317

18 Kansas State 304

19 Notre Dame 302

20 UConn 300

21 Arkansas 299

22 Georgetown 297

23 Purdue 291

24 Utah 288

25 NC State 271

Coaches Poll, All-Time College Basketball Rankings
1950s | 1960s | 1970s | 1980s | 1990s | 2000s | 2010s | 2020s  

NEXT: Coaches Rankings: Greatest College Basketball Programs of All-Time 26 to 140

College Football Transfer Portal 2023 Rankings: 15 Best Defensive Tackles

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

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


Transfer Portal 2023 Rankings: Defensive Tackles

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USC, Oklahoma, and other defenses that needed to build up the infrastructure made big splashes in the transfer portal. It’s a very, very good group that goes deep with plenty of versatile options to work with. There might not be a slew of huge names, but it’s one of the better position in this year’s portal.

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

They’re the 15 defensive 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 Devin Phillips

New School: Kansas
Former School: Colorado State

14 Keeshawn Silver

New School: Kentucky
Former School: North Carolina

13 Tunmise Adeleye

New School: Michigan State
Former School: Texas A&M

12 Paris Shand

New School: LSU
Former School: Arizona

11 Mosiah Nasili-Kite

New School: Auburn
Former School: Maryland

10 Jarrett Jackson

New School: Michigan State
Former School: Florida State

9 Jacob Lacey

New School: Oklahoma
Former School: Notre Dame

8 Jordan Jefferson

New School: LSU
Former School: West Virginia

7 Anthony Lucas

New School: USC
Former School: Texas A&M

6 Jack Sullivan (DE)

New School: USC
Former School: Purdue

5 Darrell Jackson

New School: Florida State
Former School: Miami

4 Kyon Barrs

New School: USC
Former School: Arizona

3 CamRon Jackson

New School: Florida
Former School: Memphis

2 Braden Fiske

New School: Florida State
Former School: Western Michigan

1 Justin Rogers

New School: Auburn
Former School: Kentucky

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

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

AP Poll, college basketball rankings 2000s: What are the greatest programs of all-time based on the AP poll final rankings?

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


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

Take all the AP final rankings and use our CFN scoring system – the AP 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 AP 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 AP final top 25 came out at the end of the regular season and before the NCAA Tournaments.

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

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

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

1 Duke 200

2 Kansas 154

3 North Carolina 138

4 UConn 113

5 Pitt 111

6 Arizona 107

T7 Florida 106

T7 Illinois 106

T7 Texas 106

10 Kentucky 104

11 Oklahoma 103

12 Memphis 99

T13 Gonzaga 98

T13 Stanford 98

15 Michigan State 84

16 Louisville 82

17 UCLA 79

18 Ohio State 75

19 Syracuse 71

20 Maryland 70

21 Wisconsin 68

22 Wake Forest 64

T23 Cincinnati 58

T23 Oklahoma State 58

25 Boston College 51

Others Receiving Votes (Points): Tennessee 45, Villanova 45, Georgetown 44, Marquette 41, Washington 39, Xavier 38, Iowa State 36, Notre Dame 31, Oregon 31, LSU 28, Washington State 26, St. Joseph’s 25, Butler 24, Alabama 23, Mississippi State 22, Temple 21, Missouri 19, Nevada 17, St. John’s 17, Texas A&M 17, Purdue 16, Southern Illinois 15, Georgia Tech 13, Iowa 13, Drake 12, George Washington 12, Ole Miss 12, Creighton 11, NC State 11, USC 11, Dayton 10, Florida State 10, Indiana 10, Virginia 10, Utah 9, Miami 8, Tulsa 8, Arizona State 7, UNLV 7, Vanderbilt 7, Western Kentucky 7, Clemson 6, Providence 5, Georgia 4, Pacific 4, West Virginia 4, Winthrop 4, Davidson 3, Auburn 2, BYU 2, Texas Tech 2, Hawaii 1, UAB 1, Utah State 1

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

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

College Football Transfer Portal 2023: Every Team’s Top Transfer You Should Know

College football transfer portal 2023. Who are the players on each team you need to know?

Who are the players you have to know from the 2023 college football transfer portal? Who’s the main new guy for every team, and who are the biggest losses?


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It’s a new world of college football now with the transfer portal changing the game.

Teams are able to upgrade areas quickly, but they also have to deal with the loss of some of their own key players. Who are the players who’ll make the biggest impact for their respective teams and who are the biggest losses?

These are the transfer portal players you need to know for each team.

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

Transfer Portal: Every Team’s Transfer To Know
ACC | American Athletic | Big Ten | Big 12 | C-USA
IND | MAC | M-West | Pac-12 | SEC | Sun Belt

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College Football Transfer Portal 2023: ACC

Boston College

CB Khari Johnson
Former School: Arkansas
Career Stats: 38 tackles, 3 broken up passes
Biggest Transfer Portal Loss: QB Phil Jurkovec to Pitt

Clemson

QB Paul Tyson
Former School: Arizona State
Career Stats: 150 passing yards
Biggest Transfer Portal Loss: QB DJ Uiagalelei to Oregon State

Duke

CB Al Blades
Former School: Miami
Career Stats: 91 tackles, 4 iNT, 14 broken up passes
Biggest Transfer Portal Loss: NONE

Florida State

TE Jaheim Bell
Former School: South Carolina
Career Stats: 56 catches, 757 yards, 7 TD, 80 caries, 301 yards, 3 TD
Biggest Transfer Portal Loss: CB Sam McCall to Texas A&M

Georgia Tech

QB Haynes King
Former School: Texas A&M
Career Stats: 1,579 yards, 10 TD, 10 INT, 150 rushing yards, 1 TD
Biggest Transfer Portal Loss: QB Jeff Sims to Nebraska

Louisville

QB Jack Plummer
Former School: Cal
Career Stats: 6,500 yards, 47 TD, 19 INT, 2 rushing TD
Biggest Transfer Portal Loss: LB Monty Montgomery to Ole Miss

Miami

C/OT Matthew Lee
Former School: UCF
Career Stats: All-star center for UCF, can play guard
Biggest Transfer Portal Loss: S Avantae Williams to Maryland

NC State

QB Brennan Armstrong
Former School: Virginia
Career Stats: 9,034 yards, 58 TD, 35 INT, 1,267 rushing yards, 20 TD
Biggest Transfer Portal Loss: QB Devin Leary to Kentucky

North Carolina

CB Alijah Huzzie
Former School: ETSU
Career Stats: 179 tackles, 12 INT, 32 broken up passes
Biggest Transfer Portal Loss: CB Tony Grimes to Texas A&M

Pitt

QB Phil Jurkovec
Former School: Boston College
Career Stats: 5,405 yards, 37 TD, 17 INT, 568 rushing yards, 9 TD
Biggest Transfer Portal Loss: QB Kedon Slovis to BYU

Syracuse

CB Jaeden Gould
Former School: Nebraska
Career Stats: No Stats
Biggest Transfer Portal Loss: CB Duce Chestnut to LSU

Virginia

QB Tony Muskett
Former School: Monmouth
Career Stats: 5,687 yards, 51 TD, 16 INT, 149 rushing yards, 5 TD
Biggest Transfer Portal Loss: CB Fentrell Cypress to Florida State

Virginia Tech

WR Ali Jennings
Former School: Old Dominion
Career Stats: 142 catches, 2,265 yards, 16 TD
Biggest Transfer Portal Loss: WR Kaleb Smith to Notre Dame

Wake Forest

WR Walker Merrill
Former School: Tennessee
Career Stats: 13 catches, 168 yards, 3 TD
Biggest Transfer Portal Loss: QB Sam Hartman to Notre Dame

Transfer Portal: Every Team’s Transfer To Know
ACC | American Athletic | Big Ten | Big 12 | C-USA
IND | MAC | M-West | Pac-12 | SEC | Sun Belt

NEXT: College Football Transfer Portal 2023: American Athletic Conference

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

AP Poll, college basketball rankings 2010s: What are the greatest programs of all-time based on the AP poll final rankings?

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


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

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

Kansas put together an amazing decade without any national championships to show for it. UConn got two, Duke won two of their own, and Villanova was amazing late in the decade with two national titles in three seasons.

Kansas didn’t win any, but because the final AP rankings come after the NCAA Tournament, the No. 1 team of the 2010s have it over all the national champs.

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

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

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

1 Kansas 204

2 Duke 192

3 Kentucky 152

4 North Carolina 142

5 Michigan State 135

6 Villanova 133

7 Virginia 116

8 Gonzaga 113

9 Arizona 102

10 Louisville 101

11 Ohio State 97

12 Michigan 88

13 Wisconsin 83

14 Purdue 82

14 Syracuse 82

16 West Virginia 72

17 Wichita State 61

18 Florida 58

19 Baylor 56

20 Notre Dame 54

21 Iowa State 50

22 New Mexico 48

23 Xavier 47

24 Kansas State 46

25 Georgetown 45

Others Receiving Votes (Points): Indiana 44, Tennessee 44, Cincinnati 43, Florida State 42, Miami 41, Oregon 39, Oklahoma 37, San Diego State 37, Pitt 36, Texas Tech 29, Maryland 28, Marquette 26, UCLA 26, BYU 25, SMU 25, UConn 25, Missouri 23, Butler 22, Creighton 21, Houston 20, Utah 20, Auburn 19, Texas 18, Texas A&M 16, Northern Iowa 15, LSU 14, Murray State 14, Saint Louis 14, Temple 14, Vanderbilt 12, Buffalo 11, Virginia Tech 10, Oklahoma State 9, Nevada 8, St. John’s 8, Utah State 8, Memphis 7, Saint Mary’s 7, Wofford 7, Clemson 6, Seton Hall 6, Arkansas 5, Cal 3, UNLV 3, VCU 3, Washington 3, Richmond 2, Iowa 1

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

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