Kansas takes No. 1 in USA TODAY Sports preseason men’s basketball coaches poll

Kansas takes top spot while SEC claims most teams in preseason top 25.

The start of the 2024-25 college basketball season is almost upon us, which means it is time to unveil the preseason USA TODAY Sports men’s basketball coaches poll. There should be no surprise where Bill Self and the Kansas Jayhawks find themselves. Given how the football team has fared this season, the locals in Lawrence have been patiently waiting for tip-off to the season.

As a whole, the Big 12 has a strong showing in the rankings with five teams in the top 10 but only one other team in the top 25. They are a conference that is looking to be top-heavy but this will be a conference to keep an eye on moving forward.

The two-time defending national champion UConn Huskies check in at No. 3 behind Kansas and No. 2 ranked Alabama Crimson Tide. Dan Hurley is ready for a run at third straight title. An event that hasn’t occurred since seven straight titles in the late 60s and early 70s by John Wooden and the UCLA Bruins. This year’s Bruins team is one of four Big Ten teams to make the preseason poll.

There are going to be plenty of eyes in the SEC with John Calipari leaving Kentucky to take over the Arkansas Razorbacks program. The Hogs are among nine teams hailing from the conference, including newcomer the Texas Longhorns. Here is how the full rankings look:

2024-25 Preseason Men’s Basketball Coaches Poll

Rank School Last Year’s Record Points
1 Kansas 23-11 743 (15)
2 Alabama 25-12 718 (6)
3 Connecticut 37-3 717 (6)
4 Houston 32-5 698 (4)
5 Duke 27-9 625
6 Iowa State 29-8 591
7 Gonzaga 27-8 575
8 Baylor 24-11 545
9 Arizona 27-9 510
10 North Carolina 29-8 498
11 Auburn 27-8 465
12 Tennessee 27-9 437
13 Purdue 34-5 390
14 Creighton 25-10 342
15 Texas A&M 21-15 332
16 Arkansas 16-17 272
17 Marquette 27-10 268
18 Indiana 19-14 208
19 Texas 21-13 166
20 Cincinnati 22-15 163
21 Florida 24-12 130
22 UCLA 16-17 123
23 Kentucky 23-10 95
24 Illinois 29-9 87
25 Mississippi 20-12 66

Dropped Out:

No. 13 North Carolina State (26-15); No. 15 Clemson (24-12); No. 18 San Diego State (26-11); No. 20 Utah State (28-7); No. 22 Saint Mary’s (26-8); No. 23 South Carolina (26-8); No. 24 Washington State (25-10); No. 25 Texas Tech (23-11)

Others Receiving Votes:

Texas Tech (23-11) 60; Rutgers (15-17) 57; St. John’s (20-13) 42; Xavier (16-18) 26; Michigan State (20-15) 25; Brigham Young (23-11) 16; Oregon (24-12) 16; Kansas State (19-15) 11; Boise State (22-11) 9; Saint Mary’s (26-8) 9; Clemson (24-12) 8; Dayton (25-8) 7; Ohio State (22-14) 7; Maryland (16-17) 4; Grand Canyon (30-5) 3; Mississippi State (21-14) 2; Princeton (24-5) 2; San Diego State (26-11) 2; Virginia (23-11) 2; Wake Forest (21-14); Wisconsin (22-14)

The USA TODAY Sports Board of Coaches is made up of 31 head coaches at Division I institutions. All are members of the National Association of Basketball Coaches. The board for the 2024-25 season: Tobin Anderson, Iona; Adrian Autry, Syracuse; John Becker, Vermont; Randy Bennett, Saint Mary’s; Jeff Boals, Ohio; Alvin Brooks, Lamar; Scott Drew, Baylor; Matt Driscoll, North Florida; Dan Earl, Chattanooga; Jonas Hayes, Georgia State; Alan Huss, High Point; Donte’ Jackson, Grambling; Ben Jacobson, Northern Iowa; James Jones, Yale; Greg Kampe, Oakland; Brad Korn, Southeast Missouri State; Greg McDermott, Creighton; Nick McDevitt, Middle Tennessee; Mike McGarvey, Lafayette; Niko Medved, Colorado State; Dan Monson, Eastern Washington; Chris Mooney, Richmond; Nate Oats, Alabama; Eric Olen, UC San Diego; Matt Painter, Purdue; Michael Schwartz, East Carolina; Patrick Sellers, Central Connecticut State; Zach Spiker, Drexel; Brett Tanner, Abilene Christian; Stan Waterman, Delaware State; Jeff Wulbrun, Denver.

Duke basketball will play the Kansas Jayhawks at Madison Square Garden next season

The State Farm Champions Classic announced on Tuesday that the Duke Blue Devils will play Kansas at Madison Square Garden next November.

The Duke Blue Devils will play in Madison Square Garden twice during the 2025 calendar year.

The State Farm Champions Classic revealed its 2025-26 teams and schedule on Tuesday, including a game between Duke and the Kansas Jayhawks at the iconic New York venue on November 18.

The Blue Devils have played Kansas six times since current head coach Bill Self took over, and he’s gotten the better of Duke over his tenure. The Jayhawks have won four of those games, but the Blue Devils beat Kansas the last time the two met in Madison Square Garden back in 2019. Tre Jones finished with 15 points, seven assists, and six rebounds in the 68-66 victory.

The Jayhawks beat Duke 69-64 when they played in November 2022, the first and only time they’ve met in the Jon Scheyer era.

The Blue Devils will also play a rare February non-conference game against the Illinois Fighting Illini at the Garden this season.

The Kentucky Wildcats and Michigan State Spartans will play each other as the other half of the Champions Classic doubleheader.

Jalon Daniels, Jared Casey connect for Kansas TD at Arrowhead Stadium

The #Jayhawks are playing their homecoming game at Arrowhead Stadium, and took an early lead over the Houston #Cougars with this touchdown.

The Kansas Jayhawks are playing their homecoming game at Arrowhead Stadium against the Houston Cougars, and they wasted no time finding the endzone in the first quarter.

With so much pressure on Kansas to turn their 1-5 around this season, the Jayhawks needed to make a statement early against the Cougars, and star quarterback Jalon Daniels was able to do just that.

After a short kickoff return by Kansas to open the game, Daniels easily marched the Jayhawks’ offense down the field, and eventually connected with tight end Jared Casey for the game’s opening score.

Take a look at the outstanding red zone connection between Daniels and Casey in this video, which was posted by Kansas Football’s official account on Twitter:

Kansas continued extending its lead at Arrowhead Stadium through the end of the first quarter and into the second, and it currently holds a convincing 21-0 advantage over Houston before halftime.

Duke men’s and women’s basketball both play the preseason No. 1 team in the country

With the preseason AP Poll for both men’s and women’s basketball now released, the Blue Devils play both No. 1 teams this winter.

The Associated Press released its preseason men’s basketball rankings on Monday and preseason women’s basketball rankings on Tuesday, but the two lists featured one constant for the Duke Blue Devils.

The Kansas Jayhawks took the top spot on the men’s side while defending national champion South Carolina remained atop the women’s rankings, and both teams will play the Duke Blue Devils before the end of the calendar year.

The men’s basketball team travels to Las Vegas for a battle with the Jayhawks on Tuesday, November 26, just days before Thanksgiving. Kansas is one of five teams in the preseason top 25 on Duke’s schedule, including four teams within the top 11. The Arizona Wildcats (No. 10) and Auburn Tigers (No. 11) are on the slate between November 22 and December 4, the most intimidating stretch of the year.

On the women’s side, the Gamecocks host the Blue Devils on Thursday, December 5, as a part of the ACC/SEC Challenge. While South Carolina hasn’t lost a game since the 2022-23 season, Duke begins the season as the No. 11 team in the country after retaining six of its top seven scorers, recruiting a five-star freshman, and pulling a former five-star from the transfer portal.

Duke basketball fans will get a healthy dose of ranked matchups across both teams before the conference schedule even starts.

Duke basketball begins the 2024-25 season within the top 10 of the AP Poll

The Associated Press released its preseason men’s basketball rankings on Monday. See where the Blue Devils start the year here.

The Associated Press released its preseason men’s basketball rankings on Monday, and despite Duke head coach Jon Scheyer pulling in the best recruiting class in the country, the Blue Devils didn’t crack the top five.

The voters left Duke seventh, only three points behind the Gonzaga Bulldogs in sixth.

Top-ranked freshman [autotag]Cooper Flagg[/autotag] and recent Olympian [autotag]Khaman Maluach[/autotag] lead a freshman class featuring four five-star talents, but Scheyer lost 10 players from last year’s roster. Even with veteran transfers like Tulane’s Sion James, Purdue’s Mason Gillis, and Syracuse’s Maliq Brown, there have been national questions about Duke’s reliance on first-year talent. The team’s spot in the rankings indicates that several voters buy into those concerns.

Despite Scheyer’s team coming in lower than expected, Duke still finished higher than any other team in the ACC. The North Carolina Tar Heels, last year’s conference champion, will start the year in ninth, and no other team from the conference made the top 25 (The Wake Forest Demon Deacons, Miami Hurricanes, the Clemson Tigers, and Louisville Cardinals all received votes).

The Kansas Jayhawks, Alabama Crimson Tide, Connecticut Huskies, Houston Cougars, and Iowa State Cyclones took the top five spots in order.

Start time announced for Kansas’ homecoming game at Arrowhead Stadium

Check out this key information about the Kansas #Jayhawks’ homecoming football game against the Houston Cougars at Arrowhead Stadium.

When the Kansas City Chiefs head to California for a Super Bowl LVIII rematch against the San Francisco 49ers, the Kansas Jayhawks will take the defending champions’ place at Arrowhead Stadium to play their homecoming game against the Houston Cougars.

The Jayhawks have fallen well short of expectations to start their 2024 season, and are still reeling after a brutal 35-31 loss to Arizona State last week in Tempe.

Kansas will have the benefit of a bye week to assess the damage and make much-needed adjustments ahead of their matchup against the Cougars on October 19.

On Monday, Kansas Football’s official Twitter account announced the start time for the Jayhawks’ second game at Arrowhead:

https://twitter.com/KU_Football/status/1843350611896775141

Now halfway through the season, Kansas is desperately hoping to turn things around in search of their third-straight bowl game.

If speedy quarterback Jalon Daniels can avoid crucial turnover mistakes and running back Devin Neal can continue to perform at an elite level against Houston, the Jayhawks may be able to get out of Kansas City with a win.

Jayhawks at Arrowhead: Kansas RB Daniel Hishaw Jr. scores impressive touchdown

Check out this video of #Jayhawks RB Daniel Hishaw Jr. scoring a touchdown during Kansas’ matchup against the TCU at Arrowhead Stadium.

The Kansas City Chiefs won’t be playing at Arrowhead Stadium this weekend, but the Kansas Jayhawks are doing their best to put on a show for fans in the defending Super Bowl champions’ absence.

The Jayhawks entered their matchup against the TCU Horned Frogs with a chip on their shoulders after a disappointing 1-3 start to their 2024 season.

Kansas put together an impressive showing in the first half of their tilt against TCU and opened up the third quarter with a six-minute drive that ended with a touchdown scored by running back Daniel Hishaw Jr.

Check out this video of the speedster’s score that gave the Jayhawks a lead early in the second half:

Hishaw, who joined Kansas in 2020, is part of the Jayhawks’ outstanding ground game, which is usually spearheaded by star running back Devin Neal.

If Hishaw and Neal can continue to dominate the Horned Frogs through the rest of this game, the Jayhawks should be able to secure victory at Arrowhead Stadium.

Jayhawks at Arrowhead: Kansas RB Devin Neal scores nifty touchdown

Check out this video of Kansas #Jayhawks RB Devin Neal scoring a nifty touchdown against the TCU Horned Frogs at Arrowhead Stadium.

The Kansas Jayhawks are looking to right the ship today as they take on the TCU Horned Frogs at Arrowhead Stadium, home of the Kansas City Chiefs.

Kansas has struggled through the early part of their schedule this season, falling well short of preseason expectations.

But, a quick start in their matchup against the TCU Horned Frogs on Saturday may have turned the tide for the Jayhawks.

After quarterback Jalon Daniels connected with wide receiver Luke Grimm for an early touchdown on Kansas’ first drive, the Jayhawks marched back down the field to put up another seven points when star running back Devin Neal scored an impressive touchdown.

Check out this video of Neal’s nifty red zone run that gave Kansas a six-point lead over TCU:

Kansas is off to an almost-perfect start in Saturday’s game, and if Neal can continue to make his presence felt against TCU’s defense, the Jayhawks may walk out of Arrowhead Stadium with a win.

Stakes are high as hot seat awaits loser of TCU vs Kansas matchup

Neither Kansas or TCU look great so far this year, but Week 5 is redemption time for one of these Big 12 programs.

A college football sicko is someone who watches everything, and follows the storylines everywhere. Even if it means watching “bad” football, a sicko finds the storylines and the stakes playing out on the field.

The “Sickos Only” Big 12 Game of the Week is between the TCU Horned Frogs and Kansas Jayhawks. TCU is 2-2 and coming off of an embarrassing loss last week to SMU, while Kansas is 1-3 with no wins over FBS competition this year.

This game is, understandably, on ESPN+ at 3:30 PM ET, but you will want to keep an eye on it because of the implications it can have on college football as early as Monday. 

There is not a pair of teams in the Big 12 with a wilder roller coaster over the last 24 months than head coach Sonny Dykes’ TCU Horned Frogs and head coach Lance Leipold’s Kansas Jayhawks. But College Football Playoff appearance and historic program turnaround aside, Saturday’s Big 12 matchup is between two teams that have simply not played well this year… even though they were supposed to be improved.

TCU did not start the year ranked, but all reporting in the offseason indicated they were focused on getting back to the top of the Big 12. Meanwhile, Kansas was 8-36 between 2018-2021. But under Lance Leipold Kansas saw improvement every year, from 2-10 in 2021 to 6-7 in 2022, then to 9-4 in 2023. This time a year ago, Leipold was a name thrown around premier programs that needed new coaches. Now? It feels like everyone’s figured him out.  

What makes this a game fans can’t overlook is that the losing team’s coach is going to be on the hot seat Monday. The winner? They’ve got a conference win under their belt and are building the program back up. The losing coach is just a loser, but the winning coach? They “navigated adversity.”

Even amidst their struggles, TCU and quarterback Josh Hoover flaunt a prolific offense. The Horned Frogs have 20 touchdowns in 4 games, but only two wins. Further, the losses have been embarrassing. Falling apart vs UCF was only trumped by getting blown out by cross-metroplex rival SMU. The cherry on top? Watching Coach Dykes ushered off the field in Dallas after getting ejected. Kansas, led by quarterback Jalon Daniels, entered the year as a dark-horse Big 12 contender but presently would settle for winning a Big 12 game. Daniels is a true dual-threat quarterback, and Kansas will need to put a lot on his shoulders to pull this one out. 

Parker’s Pick: TCU. While they aren’t the CFP team of 2022, they have shown the ability to play FBS football… and that may be all it takes this weekend.

Add another chapter to the Lindsay Kuhle file: Experienced Kansas team CPAs its way to Golfweek Red Sky title

It’s another chapter in Kuhle’s long history at Red Sky, though she remains unsure whether her Kansas team knows the extent of that story.

In nearly every aspect of preparation for the Golfweek Red Sky Challenge, Lindsay Kuhle used the same tagline: High and soft.

“They laugh at me when I say, high and soft, high and soft,” Kuhle said of team preparations for Red Sky Golf Club in Wolcott, Colorado. “To carry it, know your distance and direction and be on the right side of the hole. That’s all we talked about this week – and we talked about putting, high and soft; wedges, high and soft; approach shots, high and soft. Because it is firm but you do have to carry it on the green.”

Clearly, it resonated, because Kansas left the scenic Tom Fazio layout, nestled into the mountains at more than 8,000 feet, with the team title. The Jayhawks were 15 under for 54 holes, which was seven shots ahead of two-time defending champion Pepperdine and Boise State.

Eastern Michigan’s Savannah De Bock won the individual title at 12 under.

Scores: Golfweek Red Sky Classic

The win is just another chapter in Kuhle’s long history at Red Sky, though she remains unsure whether her Kansas team knows the extent of that story. Kuhle, a Colorado native, spent 15 seasons at Denver University, including nine as the head coach. She has coached a team in this event nearly every year since it debuted at Red Sky, in 2010. In the early years, Denver was the event co-host.

“I think they know I know the course,” Kuhle said, “but I don’t think they know how well and how many times I’ve been here.”

Kuhle hadn’t brought a Kansas team to Red Sky, however, since 2021 – her first year as head coach. The Jayhawks finished 10th of 20 teams that year. This time, she started four seniors and a junior. It’s an old team with experience and for proof, check the individual honors.

Over the summer, her 10-tournament roster collected 13 individual titles – everything from the Austrian Women’s Open to the English Women’s Open to the Florida State Women’s Open to the Kansas Women’s Amateur.

“I do think it says a lot about the growth of our program in three short years if you look at where we were at this tournament three years ago to today, we’ve just got players that want to turn pro and players that love the game of golf and compete hard for KU,” Kuhle said.

Last spring, Kuhle coached Kansas to its first team title at the Westbrook Invitational. The Golfweek Red Sky Invitational is now Kuhle’s second.

“Wins are hard to come by and it’s getting more competitive in women’s college golf and with the .500 rule, it’s hard to win,” Kuhle said. “Just to be under pressure – I will say about my team, we’re an old team. … They’re experienced.”

Kuhle sees the program evolving most notably in the kind of players coming to campus. Her 10-woman roster has ties to six different countries. They’re coming for golf, and to prepare themselves for a professional golf career.

Reaching the national championship figures prominently into the team’s vision boards – no surprise there – and there are many numbers surrounding Kuhle’s impact at KU that show how she’s pulling the program toward that goal, such as year-end national ranking. The highest the program has been ranked in its 50-year history is No. 38.

“Last year we were 48 and the year before we were 51 so we keep getting closer,” Kuhle said. “So those two things are on our mind.”

At Red Sky, Kansas was a favored program in the 16-team field. Kuhle took that position and she created a mantra for her players: CPA.

“I asked the girls, do you know what a CPA is? They said yeah, certified [public] accountant,” Kuhle said. “I said no, it means we’re going to play with courage, be patient and be aggressive. And if we do those three things, we’re going to be in a good position come the final round.”

When Denver won the team title in 2017 (while Kuhle was the head coach but out on maternity leave), it was with a nail-biting comeback in the final round. Needless to say, after Kansas went 11 under in the second round of the event this year and built a five-shot lead, Kuhle was not naïve enough to think it was over. She encouraged her players to keep approaching the course confidently, but in the right way.

“Really tried to say that you have to play aggressive and you’ve got to go for these pins even though they look tucked,” she said, “but if you have, again, high and soft and good distance and direction, you’ll get the ball to stop where you want it to.”

Johanna Ebner felt right at home in Vail Village during the Golfweek Red Sky Classic. (Photo submitted)

One memorable thing about the week at Red Sky – for any team – is the scenery. Kuhle noted that in the five days they were in the mountains, the leaves began to change to a beautiful yellow. Her team’s favorite off-course memory was of nearby Vail Village, where they grabbed dinner and ice cream and took a relaxing stroll. Austrian Johanna Ebner, especially, was struck by the similarity to the Austrian and Bavarian ski towns she grew up around. That familiarity helped Ebner to a top-10 finish individually.

“She kept saying that this reminds me of back home,” Kuhle said.

And that gave her something in common with the coach.